LOCAL/STATE The Michigan Daily - Monday, November 22, 1999 - 3A CAMPUS s UMHS praised for elimination of mercury use Health Care Without Harm, a coali- tion of more than 200 organizations which are interested in reducing envi- ronmental hazards from the medical community, has praised University Health Systems for eliminating mer- cury from its machines and chemicals. Since 1995, University Health Systems have been working to reduce the use of mercury in all of its health centers. UMHS was also acknowledged by * Health Care Without Harm in August for converting all of its waste manage- ment processes from incineration to steam-sterilization. Medical School to have new Exec. Associate Dean The University Board of Regents qprtoved the appointment of Prof. James Woolliscroft to executive associ- Me dean for the Medical School at their meeting last week. Woolliscroft is a professor of inter- nal medicine, the Josiah Macy Professor of medical education and associate dean for graduate medical education. Season of Light' *show at Museum The Museum of Natural History is hosting a "Season of Light" show in the planetarium: is scheduled to open Friday and run through Dec. 30. The show will examine celebrations such as Christmas and Hanukkah. Tickets may be purchased in the muse- um store and cost $3 each, *Playwright to read works at Rackham The University English Department and the Office of the Provost will host poet and play- wright Wole Soyinka for a poetry reading on Dec. 2, at 5 p.m. in the Rackham Amphitheater. Currently, Soyinka is a Woodruff Professor of the Arts at Emory University. He will be visiting as part of this year's Visiting Writer Series. The reading will be free and open to the public. Regents to award IF professorship to Poli. Sci. Prof. Prof. John Jackson will hold the OLSA James Orin Murfin Professorship of Political Science. His appointment was approved by the University regents at their November meeting. Jackson served as the director of the Taubman Program in American Institutions from 1981-87 and as chair of the Department of Political Science from 1994-99. Prof. to lecture at 4wards ceremony Prof. Abigail Stewart has been chosen as the University's Henry Russel Lecturer for 2000 and Prof. Sid Gilman will be the lecturer for 2001. Stewart is a professor of psycholo- gy and women's studies. She is scheduled to speak at the annual Russel Awards for junior faculty Onembers in March. Jazz concert planned at AADL The Royal Hat Trio plans to perform, in the lobby of the Main Library Friday beginning at 2 p.m. The free concert marks the end of the traveling exhibit in the library, "The Jazz Age in Paris; 1914-1940:' VIddle Eastern lecture planned On Nov. 29 in 3050 Frieze Building, Middle Eastern literature Prof. Anton Shammas will give a lecture titled "Ibn al-Haytham Puts Cervantes in Perspective." The lecture is scheduled to begin at 4 p.m. -Compiled by Dai' Staff Reporter Lisa Koivu. I Anti-Klan protesters to appeal conviction By Jeremy W. Peters Daily Staff Reporter After being convicted in September of assault with a dangerous weapon for his participation in an anti-Ku Klux Klan rally, Thomas Doxey and his attorney are still adamant about his innocence and vow they will appeal the ruling. Of the 21 anti-Klan protesters arrested, Doxey was the only one convicted. Doxey's attorney, Marinade Massie, lent her opin- ions on her client's conviction in a press conference Friday. "It was based on perjury. It was an inaccurate con- viction. The one eyewitness against Mr. Doxey, an undercover narcotics agent, is ... a highly trained liar," Massie said. Chief Assistant Prosecutor for Washtenaw County Joseph Burke said he is personally offended by Massie's implication that Officer Michael Lencioni perjured himself. "I think it is incredibly offensive, unethical and unprofessional of her to say that," Burke said, adding that, "She is accusing the officer of a crime and I strongly believe that is not the case" In May 1998, Doxey, a 22-year-old East Lansing resident, took part in a protest of the KKK on the steps of Ann Arbor's Guy C. Larcom Municipal Building which resulted in violence when a fence separating the KKK and protesters was torn down and bottles were thrown. Doxey's attorney maintains that not only is he innocent of committing violence during the protest but he is a non-violent person. "He was there, protesting peacefully ... and the police are trying to scapegoat him. All Tommy want- ed to do was to communicate to the Klan that they are not welcome ... in southeast Michigan," Massie said. Burke said he thought the protest, even though it opposed the KKK, should never have turned violent. "I think when anybody uses violence. whether it's against the Klan or anybody, it's wrong!'"he said. Though Doxey's attorney described him as docile, the group with which he attended the protest, Anti- Racist Action, is considered by some to promote vio- lence as an acceptable means of protest. Thom Saffold, a member of a peace team at the May 1998 protest, said he believes ARA supports violence. "ARA implies that it's OK to use violence to achieve their ends and I'm not sure I agree with that," Saffold said. According to ARA's Columbus, Ohio chapter Website, which sent representatives to the Ann Arbor protest, one of the groups fundamental principles is to stand behind their members under any circum- stances. A portion of their self description reads, "An attack on any one of us is an attack on us all:' Philosophy Prof. Eric Lormand, who served as a liaison between the peace team and the protesters, said he felt the protesters' actions were justified. "Their actions were peifcctlv reasonable acts of self defense. I think violence is justified in self defense and a Klan rally is an indirect attack;' Lormand said. "Breaking a window is not plan A, but if someone sprays you with pepper gas it is legitimate," he added. Burke, saying that he did not think Doxey's appeal would be successful, added that violent protest will be tolerated by the city. "When someone commits a crime of this sort, it is wrong and we will see that the, are charged," he said. Honors program lauds professor Alpha Iota Omicron dinner joins minority student groups DINNER A Contnue fro Pae I By Krista Gullo Daily Staff Reporter In the fall of 1952, Prof. H.D. Cameron came to the University intend- ing to be a mathematician. He took class- es in chemistry, physics and German. But when he encountered the humanities dis- tribution requirement, his plans changed. Recalling the exact moment when he let go of being a mathematician, Cameron made a reference to one of his Latin professors who he described as "my great teacher and my life-long friend." While sitting on a window ledge of the then brand new Mason Hall, Cameron's favorite professor recounted Homer's tale of the 10-year war between the Greeks and Trojans and Achilles' struggle in the "Iliad." Cameron knew then that he wanted to be a classicist. In recognition of his many years of involvement with the honors program and teaching Great Books, the honors program appointed Cameron as its first collegiate fellow. "It came as quite a surprise" Cameron said after the lecture Friday. To celebrate Cameron's appointment, the Honors Program and the College of Literature, Science and the Arts hosted a public lecture Friday in the Chemistry Building, followed by a reception in the atrium of the building. The lecture's title, "The Best Course I Ever Took," is a quote many students have used to describe Great Books. During the lec- ture, Cameron reflected on his long his- tory with Great Books and shared per- sonal experiences about former faculty members, students and Graduate Student Instructors. More than 75 people -a mix of former and present students, GSIs, alumni and faculty members - attended the lecture. After obtaining a classical studies degree as an undergraduate student, Cameron continued his doctoral studies at Princeton University, where he wrote his dissertation on Aeschylus. He then returned to the University in 1959 for his first job. A few years later, he became a professor of Great Books. Now, 37 years later, he is still a professor of Great Books, as well as a professor of Latin and Greek. Cameron also is an adjunct curator for the Museum of Zoology, specializing in spiders and scor- pions. He has taught more than 6,600 gradu- ates of the Great Books Program and has shared the teaching responsibilities with 167 GSIs Cameron said. "He is a mentor in the true sense of the word" said Ashby Kinch, a doctoral can- didate in English medieval literature who has worked with Cameron since 1996. The University started the Great Books Program after World War II and based it on a model program at Columbia University. The ideals of the program were to provide first-year students with a chance to take small classes taught by senior faculty; to help students avoid early specialization; to read original texts beginning with the ancient Greeks and to provide students with a body of knowl- edge to build on. Later, the honors pro- gram incorporated Great Books into its curriculum as an English requirement. Kevin Amadon, a Great Books and German lecturer, was a first-year student in Great Books II years ago and has since returned to teach the course with Cameron. "It's hard .to measure what we gain from it, but I think its immense" Amadon said. "It is a privilige to be able to spend time with these kinds of ideas and books." The Collegiate Fellow in Honors award is a multi-year award recognizing someone who teaches Honors students and who has done it well, said Rob Van der Voo, honors director and geology fac- ulty member. The award, funded by alumni donations, gives $15,000 to the recipient during a three year period. An endowment of $50,000 that alum Mark Graham donated also will be used for the award. LSA sophomore Matt Abelson was one of Cameron's Great Books students last school year. He said he attended the lecture because he wanted to hear Cameron lecture again. "He's a very engaging lecturer," Abelson said. "I really value him as a person, especially in my second year." "It was really fun to see him lecture again because I really enjoyed the class last year," said LSA sophomore Ari Melber, another one of Cameron's for- mer students. "I think that the lecture and the event would have been of interest to most U of M students because the intellectual and academic issues that Cameron discussed based on personal history and Greek Literature are relevant to us all," Melber added. the lines of ethnic division is good," said Black Greek Association President, Marcus Collins, an Engineering junior . Kulkarni agreed that the dinner went as well as he had hoped. "I was ecstatic about the way things went. We promoted Indian culture, and talked about different issues. People were also taking down phone numbers and e-mail addresses, which was one of the main focuses for the evening," he said. The evening commenced with the second annual dance hosted by AIO. Kulkarni said the dance was one way the fraternity was trying to educate the University community about Indian culture. Student performed three tradi- tional dances, the Raas, Garba and the Bhangra. All of the dances, LSA junior Ram Dharmarajan said, are common at weddings, religious ceremonies and social events in India. Halfway through the event, JOANNA PAINE/Daily Ravi Maddipati (19ft) and Suketu Patel (right), members of the new fraternity Alpha Iota Omicron, participate in the Raas dance Friday evening. which lasted until 12:30 a.m., AIO presented ASHA with a check for $500. AIO plans to hold a date auc- tion, and it also is working on a Bhangra dance competition that is scheduled to take place on Jan. 21, 2000 at the Michigan Theater. CHECK OUT THE DAILY'S WEBSITE BEFORE GOING TO CLASS IN THE MORNING. h Iwg 'I ,.. Anyone for take-out? Mich. congress reps approve budget deal Associated Press Most of Michigan's congressional delegation voted for final approval of a massive budget deal with President Clinton. After Congress approved the $390 billion spending plan last week, it adjourned for the year. The senate voted 74-24 Friday for the budget measure that contained bipartisan victories. Michigan's sena- tors split on the vote with Carl Levin, a Democrat, voting against the bill while Spencer Abraham, a Republican, voted for it. In Michigan's 16-member House delegation, nine members voted for the measure Thursday. The House version passed 296-135. Two Republicans and four Democrats voted against the measure, including Vernon Ehlers (R-Grand Rapids) and Lynn Rivers (D-Ann Arbor). Rep. John Conyers (D-Detroit) did not vote. Michigan lawmakers had mixed feel- ings about the bill. "In the final analysis, this bill was more good than bad," said Rep. Bart Stupak (D-Menominee). "It is not perfect, but it represents an acceptable compromise that sufficient- ly meets the needs of Americans," said Rep. Pete Hoekstra, (R-Holland). Sen. Levin and some members of Michigan's House delegation com- plained they were not given enough time to review the mammoth spending measure and determine what was in it before they had to vote. Levin also objected to what he described as the "gimmickry" used to keep the budget balanced, such as "saving" $3.5 billion by moving the last military pay day to the next fiscal year. With the new iBook; everything you need to get onto the Internet is built in. Just plug it in, answer a few simple questions and you can be surfing in ten minutes out of the box. iBook gives you a bright 12.1-inch screen, built-in CD-ROM and a battery that lasts up to six hours. So come get your hands on a new iBook today. Then the Internet will always be as close as your nearest phone jack Uf C, 7 f 9 J r