0 611 Church Street Ann Arbor, Mi. 996-2747 robust refreshing retreat. Page 16A-Thursday, September 6, 1979-The Michigan Daily Dearborn, Flint seek new chiefs By ADRIENNE LYONS As the University community awaited for word over the summer of the school's search for a new president, the selection processes for two of the University's other high posts were quietly being conducted. Both Leonard Goodall and William Moran, chancellors of the University's Dearborn and Flint campuses, respec- tively, accepted positions at other schools almost simultaneously last spring. Goodall is now the president of the University of Nevada-Las Vegas, and Moran is now the Chancellor of the University of North Carolina in Green- sboro. Coincidentally, both men assumed their University posts in 1971, when the school created the Dearborn and Flint chancellorships. THE SEARCH process for new chan- cellors is, according to Interim Univer- sity President Allan Smith, "somewhere between the search for a dean and a president." Each campus has its own search committee, comprised of students, alumni, faculty, and community representatives. Both committees must submit a list of their final choices to the University Board of Regents by February, 1980. With Goodall gone, Political Science Prof. Bernard Klein has been appointed Interim Chancellor at Dearborn. For- mer English Department Chairman William Vasse took a similar position at Flint. SMITH SAID the search committees are looking for candidates with strong leadership abilities and academic skills. The committees have also set forth requirements for persons who can work in an urban area, Smith said, since both campuses are located in such regions. Finally, the ability to interact well with both the community and faculty and work as fundraisers, were the last qualifications Smith said the committees wanted. According to Moran, "the chancellor is the chief executive officer of the the two campus branches can be direc- ted by the University president or the Board of Regents, both of which have authority on all three campuses. THE TWO CAMPUSES are very similar. The Flint campus opened in students, most of whom commute to school. While neither Dearborn nor Flint of- fer the same facilities as the Ann Arbor campus, administrators point"out that there are some advantages to attending classes there. For instance, unlike in Ann Arbor, all classes, most of which are smaller, are taught by professors. Both universities have grown physically over the years. "We began as a one-building campus that has led to a branch of a University that enjoys a 42-acre campus," said Stan Blood, in- formation services officer at Flint University Relations. "We'll be building for the next five years straight," he said. Already under construction in Flint is a $7 million University Center, which will come equipped with community service rooms, saunas, and counseling centers. The Dearborn campus' additions am- clude a new athletic building which opened last fall, a $10 million state- funded library, scheduled for com- pletion in 1981, and a University Mall, slated to open in 1980, said Dearborn University Relations Director Richard Reynolds. Reynolds described the mall as half offices and classrooms, and half con- taining stores and game rooms. Reynolds added that the $4 million structure is privately funded. Moran Goodall 'i 1. campus. He is responsible for all operations in Flint (or Dearborn). He deals directly with the (state) legislature and handles external relations. He must also meet monthly with the Regents," he added. Despite a significant amount of autonomy, however, the chancellors of 1956, just three years before the one at Dearborn. Both schools were originally attended by upperclass students only, but have since grown to include fresh- persons, sophomores, and some graduate programs. The complexes are located in the hearts of their respective cities, making accessibility easy for the Keep your mind from OUTSIDERS DOMINATE ANNUAL EVENT: Hash Bash draws a new crowd 1 yawni ng. By BETH PERSKY It started in 1972 as a celebration of the state's enactment of a more lenient marijuana possession law. Each April 1 since, thousands have grouped on the Diag for the famous Hash Bash, but many claim the event has lost any symbolic significance and has instead turned into an all-day party with local and out-of-town high schoolers as the main celebrants. The first Hash Bash attracted about 500 persons, most of them University students. Over the years, however, University students appear to have been increasingly avoiding the mob on the Diag every April Fool's Day. IN THE EARLY DAYS, the Hash Bash was an event supported by such political groups as the Ann Arbor Tribal Council, the Human Rights Par- ty-which once held seats on the City Council-and the Rainbow People's Party, led by John Sinclair. Sinclair had been among the leaders of the fight for less severe penalties for marijuana possession. After serving 29 months of a ten-year sentence for giving two joints to an undercover agent, Sinclair successfully appealed his conviction. Marijuana possession had been a felony punishable by up to ten years on prison, but the new law made it a misdemeanor with violators subject to up to one year in prison and/or a $1000 fine. In 1974, Ann Arbor voters passed an even less stringent law-after the city council had passed and then rejected a similar ordinance-making possession of small amounts of marijuana within the city limits subject only to a $5 fine. OTHER EARLY SUPPORTERS of the Hash Bash included Ann Arbor's state Representative Perry Bullard, who posed for photographers in 1973 with a joint in his mouth. Attendance at the annual event varies with the weather-the better the weather the better the turnout. Five hundred people appeared on a rainy day in 1972, whereas 5000 swarmed to the Diag the following year. Gloomy weather in 1974 contributed to the shrunken crowd of 1500, but the next year an estimated 3000 showed up, in- cluding motorcycle gang members, a natural healer, and a creature dressed as a lizard who claimed to be "tooth decay." In 1976, two strippers on the steps of the Graduate Library joined the revelers, while almost 5000 amassed on the Diag in 1977. The estimated figures fell to 3500 in 1978 and 2000 last April. But the crowd size is difficult to estimate according to Ann Arbor Police Chief Walter Krasny. He said as many as 10,000 may flow in and out of the Diag area during the entire day. "BUT MOST PEOPLE COME out of Emma U curiosity rather than any desire to sell or smoke pot," Krasny said. "The majority of them are high school kids from the outside area-there's a large influx of people from all over this part of the state." Though years ago a large portion of the crowd was University-oriented students, Krasny said, participants now are "generally in the teen-age group." The police chief said the popularity of hard drugs, especially LSD, has decreased greatly at the Bash during recent years. "LSD has decreased tremendously in the past five or six years-People have become aware of the dangers," said Krasny. DESPITE THE REDUCED prepon- derance of hard drugs, police protec. tion at the Bash has increased, spurred in 1977 by protest letters by members of the University community-ad- ministration, staff, and students-to several legislators. The corresponden- ce was followed by a meeting between Ann Arbor police and University of- ficials. While two plainclothes police officers were sufficient to contain the crowd in its early years, 26 appeared in 1977, 60 in 1978, and 40 last year. "More problems have been developing over the past few years," said Krasny. "Drinking and disorderly conduct are the reasons we had to take a different look at the Hash Bash." During the Hash Bash, the Univer- sity's safety department keeps all buildings locked except to, those producing a yellow student ID card. "Our major concern during the un- fortunate event is the protection of the buildings," said University Safety Director Walt Stevens. 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