,rt- - I A, - I- : --.- r%-! L. r'--' -J-- A --A ^ *CRIME W ' Gun pulled during fight in South Quad After a verbal altercation Wednesday on the fifth floor of South Zuad Residence Hall, an unidentified suspect who was with two other unidentified people produced a gun and pointed it at a group of 12 subjects who had confronted his group, accord- ing to Department of Public Safety reports. Upon displaying the firearm all of ,he subjects involved fled the area. There are only vague descriptions of the suspects and upon investigation y officers, witnesses were reluctant Io give details of the event, DPS reports state. The case is under investigation. Trespasser found drunk in Dennison A maintenance worker entered auditorium 182 in the Dennison build- ing Tuesday to clean and found a man *leeping in one of the seats, according to DPS reports. The worker and another custodian brought the subject outside for pickup by DPS officers. The subject was incoherent and appeared to be intoxicated. Officers arrived and found that the subject had a bench warrant filed .against him out of Pontiac. The Pontiac Police Department was -contacted, but could not pick up the *ubject and the subject was released. Rag catches fire, disappears A rag or torn up T-shirt was found tn fire in the center lane of the park- ,pg lot at 1200 University Terrace on .lvlonday, according to DPS reports. Officers were dispatched and locat- d a burning oily rag. One officer attempted to put it out by stomping on it, but the rag disap- peared when the officer went to retrieve a fire extinguisher. The area was searched, but the offi- cer was unable to locate it, DPS reports state. He discarded a greasy shirt and greasy apron that were in the vicini- ty. 4io-hazard waste found in dumpster Multiple bags marked "bio-hazard" were found in a dumpster on Palmer Drive on Monday, according to DPS reports. '.'The bags contained sharps and blood-born pathogens. The office of Occupational Safety nd Environmental Health would not spond, DPS reports state. - An unidentified person boxed and - -ouble-bagged the bio-hazard materi- al for OSEH to pick up in the morn- 41g. Juveniles sneak Into CCRB Five or six juveniles ran into the Central Campus Recreational Building without showing any identi- Aiation Monday, according to DPS .xeports. , The subjects then went down the Stairs from the footbridge entrance. No descriptions were available, but -;fficers were able to locate one of the subjects, DPS reports state. No descriptions could be obtained to identify any of the other subjects. The one suspect was read trespass and turned over to his mother. AJ' instructor's computer stolen while in Havana ,. A computer was stolen from a University instructor while he was in #k1avana on March 7, 1999, DPS reports state. The instructor who was there could not report the incident to the Havana - Police Department at the time of the theft because he wasn't supposed to be " Cuba. Compiled by Daily Staff Reporter Avram S. Turkel. LOCAL/STATEThe Micigan Daily - Friday, April 2, 199 - arr gives address at Circle K induction .3 By Robert Gold Daily Staff Reporter Lloyd Carr, meet Circle K. Circle K, meet Lloyd Carr For two hours last night in the Anderson Room of the Michigan Union, the Michigan football coach and members of the community service organization Circle K got to know each other a little better. It turns out they have some- thing in common - a national championship. Carr spoke to Circle K members and their families at the organization's Spring Inductions. He praised the group for its com- munity success, which includes winning the International Gold Cup of Achievement last August. "They tell me this group won what amounts to a national championship," Carr said. "Success is never final. I will be interested to know if you win another." Carr told members of the crowd to continue to strive for their aspirations. "Don't let anyone tell you otherwise," Carr said. "We all have insecurities in our minds, but people that are the happiest are those that have the courage to "They tell me this group won what amounts to a national championship." - Lloyd Carr Michigan football coach follow their dreams." Much of the night was spent as members and officers explained what the organization means to them and how it has affected their lives. Circle K is a service group that gives it's time to a wide variety of area projects, from volunteering at Mott Children's Hospital to fighting poverty and homelessness in Ann Arbor. Yet, for many of its members, the club's importance goes beyond volunteer work. "What makes this organization truly unique is much more than a service club. It builds leaders;' LSA sophomore Angkana Roy said. "We build strong friendships because we work hard together and play hard together." Carr also commented on the benefits of ser- vice. "I envy you because when you give of yourself, you get so much more than you give" he said. Circle K Treasurer Brady West, an LSA sophomore, echoed these sentiments and said his experiences with group members have been monumental in his life. "Circle K has been a good 80 to 90 percent of my college life in terms of my growth as a person," West said. Before the event, Lloyd Carr said he knew little about the organization, but left impressed. "I think it was an incredible evening and we have some special people here" Carr said. The feelings of respect were mutual. "It's a real honor to have him," Circle K Vice President and LSA sophomore Katie Foley said. "He's a man that strives for excellence. like (Circle K) strives for excellence." NATHAPN (UFFEYUaiy Michigan football coach Lloyd Carr applauds the members of the Michigan Chapter of the Circle K club during his speech yesterday in the Michigan Union Anderson Room. Flash Dance LGBT members lobby in capital to alter hate-crime law By Nick Bunkley Daily Staff Reporter For the first time in 15 years, members of the gay, lesbian, bisexual and trans- gender community gathered last week in Lansing to lobby state legislators for equal rights. As part of the nationwide Equality Begins at Home campaign, the lobby involved nearly 100 people from across the state who met with lawmakers at the Capitol, said Scan Kosofsky, associate director of policy for the Triangle Foundation. A primary focus of the gathering was to show support for a pending House bill introduced by Rep. Lynne Martinez (D- Lansing) that would amend the state's hate crimes law to include gays and les- bians, Kosofsky said. Martinez said she knows first-hand the need to protect homosexuals under the hate crimes law. "There are escalating numbers on hate crimes in Michigan' Martinez said. "I1 have constituents who have been attacked based on sexual orientation." Martinez said an identical proposal passed the state House last year but died in the Senate. E. Frederic Dennis, director of the University's Office of Lesbian, Gay, I have constituents who have been attacked based on sexual orientation." - Rep. Lynne Martinez (D-Lansing) Bisexual and Transgender Affairs, said it is important for legislators to see first- hand those who would be affected by the bill. "I think that hate crimes are on the rise," Dennis said, "and one of the ways that we can effectively fight that is to be visible." Kosofsky said visibility was not a problem for the group and the gathering was effective. "No legislator could have made it out of the Capitol without knowing that gays and lesbians were there" Kosofsky said. Another goal of the gathering was to express opposition to a proposal intro- duced last year by former Republican Rep. Jack Horton, who is now the direc- tor of the Michigan Christian Coalition. The bill - which would have prohibited gay couples from adopting children - did not make it through the House Judiciay Committee last session, but Kosofsky and Dennis said they fear a similar bill may be proposed this year as well. "Before that bill got written we want- ed to let our legislators know that we oppose it," Kosofsky said. Dennis said conservative religious groups such as the Christian Coalition have targeted Michigan this year in a campaign to strip gays of their rights. Kosofsky said he doesn't wan his year's Legislature to pass laws simi- lar to 1996, when 26 states- including Michigan - banned same- sex marriages. Since that year, Michigan has also refused to recog- nize licenses of gay marriages per- formed out-of-state. Dennis said the LGBT office is organizing a petition drive to persuade legislators to back the hate crimes law amendment bill, but it's too early to tell how much support University stu- dents will lend to the proposal. DANA UNNANE/Daily Pyrotechnic Artist Stephen Rife works his fiery magic outside the University's Museum of Art last night as a part of "An Unauthorized Performance Action Event." " Lecture examines reaso- eoto dichotomy By Callie Scott Daily Staff Reporter The reason-emotion dichotomy that has maintained throughout more than 2,000 yeas of philosoph- ical thought gained a new twist courtesy of the objectivist thinking of author and philosopher Ayn Rand. This new twist was the subject of a lecture last night by Edwin Locke, University of Maryland professor of business and management and psy- chology. Locke, a member of the Ayn Rand Institute Board of Advisors, gave a lecture titled "Reason and Emotion: Ayn Rand's Solution to a 2000-Year-Old Dilemma." The lecture, organized by the University of Michigan Students of Objectivism with the assistance of the Ayn Rand Institute, drew nearly 100 people to Angell iiall Auditorium A. Its purpose, said Matt Johnson, a University alum and president of the student organization, was "to present an alternative to the reason- emotion dichotomy." "People have come to separate the world of reason from the world of emotion, the world of things from the world of ideas," Locke said, adding that this dichotomy places these two con- cepts in constant conflict with one another. The philosophy of Ayn Rand embodies the concept that ideas are objective and tied to reality. There can, therefore, be "a harmony between reason and emotion, theory and practice, mind and body," Locke said, adding, "it is not emo- tion or reason, but emotion based on reason." Locke began his presentation with a discussion about the theory underlying age-old philosophical thought, from Plato to modern times, that a lower physical body contradicts a higher moral self. "The truth or falsity of this dichotomy has profound implica- tions for humanity," Locke said, because the world is based on reason and the contradiction of emotion would be a constant threat to this. Locke said this dichotomy, which Objectivists believe to be false, has burdened humans for thousands of years. Through introspection, Ayn Rand has removed this burden - a human's belief that he or she "was split in two;" Locke said. Her phi- losophy is one of "a total mind- body integration." Ayn Rand is the author of the novels, "The Fountainhead" and "Atlas Shrugged" among other works. Her philosophy is the focus of the UMSO. The organization was founded at the University in 1985. "We're the oldest continuous club studying the philosophy ofAyn Rand to my knowl- edge in the world," Johnson said. Johnson found the lecture to be "highly original," adding that he hopes it "offers some food for thought." liuii LLWU iu: What's happening in Ann Arbor this weekend FRIDAY _ "Lecture by Ed Christian," Sponsored by Adventist SATURDAY O "Instruction to an Exercise for Mind and Bodt," Sponsored by Department of English, the Office of the President and the Office of the Provost, Rackham, Rackham Auditorium, 7:30 p.m. S1 I "I M