Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 23, 1932. Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, March 23, 1972 Marijuana commission urges decriminalization Jury rejects damages in Jackson College trial .r.. :{{{{"JJ}11:":':'::: T:......tit:{::':..:: ::::":":::::"}:":: JJF t: .:.."Jt:'.": il:? ":^1::: 1: ii:: ::::"'::i: i":::: ".:"::::i: :i:i: ":i f:i ii'ii t '": titi:: iyi. ij.fi.. ' . (Continued from Page 1) more than one ounce or not-for- BILOXI, Miss. (') - An all-i turn out to be a passing fad that profit sale of small amounts in white jury yesterday rejected all will diminish or die away if re- public. damage claims in the $13.8 mil- moved from the public spotlight -Jail terms up to 60 days and lion suit against Mississippi high- t and discouraged through vigorous fines up to $100 for disorderly con- way patrolmen and Jackson city government efforts to eliminate its duct linked to public marijuana police in connection with the 1970 c growth, importation and sale. use or intoxication. Jackson State College shootings in t which two young blacks died. c But the report also concluded -Continued felony penalties for The jury had been deliberating that its dangers don't justify con- cultivation of marijuana, sale for since Monday night. j tinued jailing and fining of persons profit or possession with intent t I sell. The commission also recoin- It was the first court test of the who merely use marijuana in pri- ended stcom e u st uni- shootings at the predominantly 1 vate r who possess small quan- formblack college May 15, 1970. titles to it. farm penalties. The President's Commission onr Specifically the commission Although the full 13-member Campus Unrest had earlier inves-n mpef trhe commenains cuisin -commission was united in recom- tigated the shootings and found made recommendations including: mending generally an end to crim- the incident unjustified. -Classification of marijuana as inal penalties for private use, some Federal and state grand jurieso contraband, subject to confisca- members differed on some epecific also investigated the incident, int tion by authorities wherever found recommendations. Reps. Tim Lee which a 200-round bullet barragei outside the home. Carter (R-Ky.) and Paul G. Rcgers by officers sprayed a girls' dor- --it$s (D-Fla.) urged non-criminal fines mitory. Neither brought criminalv -Fines of up to $100 for using; for use or possession of any charges.t marijuana in public, possession ,of frueo oseso fan hre. amount of marijuana. The damage suits, consolidated In another direction, Sens. Jacob I for the trial, were filed by rela-t K. Javits (R-N.Y.) and Harold E. tives of the dead youths and by Hughes (D-Iowa) said marijuana survivors who were injured. Nine should not be contraband, that all persons were wounded. not-for-profit sales should be free The suits asked that the 431 from criminal penalties, and that Jackson policemen and the Mis-' resign from possession in public of even more sissippi highway patrolmen be than one ounce shouldn't be pun- held financially responsible for the lished. shootings, which the blacks main- tained were unjustified. There was no comment from the blacks after the verdict, but they had said earlier they would appeal if they lost. One source close to the case had indicated that airing the shooting in open court was as important in one sense as securing a monetary judgment. The officers testified they were under a rain of bricks, bottles and stones and opened fire after a sniper shot at them from a dor- mitory window. Students and a newsman at the scene claimed that they recalled one bottle thrown at the police de- tachment - with no sign of snip- ing. The law enforcement officers were lined up about 20 yards from the dormitory; 50 to 100 young blacks milled about in front of them. Police testified that no order to "fire" was given, that the shooting was a spontaneous reaction, taken in self-defense DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN ANN ARBOR LEA CANDli THURSDAY, MARCH 23 English Dept.-Extension Se'rvice: po- HEAR CITY C etrv readings by Milton Kessler, UGLI ASK TH Da a ln a Multipurpose Rm., 4 p.m. / y Calendar Art & History of Art Lecture: N. THURS., MA Calas, Fairleigh Dickinson Univ.. N.J. Sch. of Natural Resources & Sea "The Challenge of Surrealism," Archi- City COU Grant Prog. Lecture: J. Laxer, York tecture & Design Aud., 4:10 p.m. Univ., "The Economic and Political Speech Dept. Performance: Moliere's City Ha Complications of Continental Energy "The Forced Marriage" and "Tartuffe, and Resource Policies: A Canadian Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 4:10 p.m -LISTEN IF Y View," 1040 Sch. of Nat. Res.. 12:10 p.m. International Night: Mexican food -ON V Computing Ctr. Short Course: "Ad- Mich. League cafeteria, 5 p.m. (F AGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS ^ presents ATES NIGHT OUNCIL CANDIDATES. iEM QUESTIONS R. 23-7:45 PM. ncil Chambers ll-2nd Floor OU CANNOT ATTEND- WPAG RADIO- .M . 107.1) ) c c vanced Uses of the MTS Loader," Sem-C inar Rm., Comp. Ctr., 3 p.m.t American Culture & History of Art Lecture: D. Lawall, Univ. of Va 4 "Phases of American Art, 1670-1870,"1 W. Gallery, Museum of Art, 3 p.m. Psychiatry Lecture: S. Amarel, Rut- gers Univ., "Representations of Prob- lems for Machine Problem Solving," 1057 MHRI, 3:45 p.m. Mathematics Lecture: J. Greeno, "Markovian Models of Learning and Problem Solving," 3201 Angell Hall, 41 p.m. Botany Seminar: C. Heiser, Jr., In- diana Univ., "Variation in the Bottle Gourd, Lagenaria siceraria," 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 4 p.m. Nuclear Colloquium: M. Harvey, AEC, Canada, "Cluster Models and the Fis- sion Problem," P & A Colloq. Rm. 4 p.m. Physics Seminar: F. Wu, Northeast- ern Univ., "Critical Phenomena and Phase Transitions," 1041 Randall Lab, 4 p.m. Computing Ctr. Short Course: "In- troduction to GPSS/360," 146 Bus. Ad.. t-9:30 p.m Music School: University Concert Band, Hill Aud., 8 p.m. International Coffee Hour: 1024 Hill St., 9 p.m. D.aG Daily Classifieds Get Resul ts KAFKA AND HERZL IN AN INSANE ASYLUM! "IT' TURNS" A Play by JOSEPH MUNDI BANNED IN PARIS 1 a v dr IJUDuring the course of its study,V J which the committee said was the (Continued from Page 1) most comprehensive ever under- (taken on the subject, it financed C*a ' s f d government control. It represents more than 50 research projects, political and business interests," it collected thousands of pages of said. transcripts from public .nd pri- Meanwhile The White House vate hearings and investigated said yesterday President Nixon heavy, long-term use of marijuana Read D aily will not permit a small group of in Jamaica, Greece, India and Af- labor leaders, described by the ghanistan. White House as representing but a __ small minority of American wage7a 'a71a N! earners, to sabotage his anti-in- flation program. Ziegler said of the three who I quit the Pay Board, "Because they didn't get their way, they decided to walk away from the prob lem," o He said he specifically referred to a Pay Board vote to reduce la- bor gains following a prolonged; West Coast Dock strike.,I l The Ecology Center this week is sponsoring a recycling drive aimed at collecting paper, magazines. ct bottles, and cans. Interested per- sons can bring their recyclable refuse to 1965 S. Industrial High- way this Wednesday through Sat- urday, from 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. The Center requests donors t bundle newspapers and magazines separately. In addition, bottles ANN ARBOR must be sorted by color and all metal rings removed. Cans must 12 S. University have all labels removed, and be rinsed and flattened. ' - ' -- .I--- < [ Jt} - -G C - C -JN - - --, ~.}1 . -----' y -Wr CJ+r LIFE OR DEATH A Contemporary morality play based on Matthew 26. Sunday, March 26-6 p.m. CAMPUS CHAPEL 1236 Washtenaw Running Now in AMERICAN PREMIERE this Saturday & Sunday, March 25-26-8 p.m. Israel MAOR Theatre 1429 Hill Street 75c We'llsell ou this I -shirt fore 0 Or, if you stump us with one of these questions, we'll give you the T-shirt for nothing. I I 1. What is sensitivity? 2. What does a muting control do? 3. What is a Hertz? 1. A car bearing a corpse 2. The number of back and forth vibrations of an AC signal in 1 second. 3. A national car renting company. 4. What does the term "selectivity" mean? 5. The control that makes it possible to listen to the full range of sound when music is played at a low volume is called: 1. Range control. 2. Loudness contour control. 3. Volume control. 6. What purpose does a high filter control perform? 7. What are Baxandall controls? 8. What is a watt'? 1. A unit of light. 2. A unit of power. 3. A unit of efficiency. 9. What is distortion? 10. How do the various power measurements, such as Peak-to-Peak, IHF, EIA and RMS relate to actual output power? 11. The ability of a speaker to follow low-frequency signals of large amplitude is called: 1. Transient response. 2. Compliance. 3. Efficiency. 12. What is the function of a crossover network? 13. What is meant by an acoustic- suspension speaker system? 14. What are the advantages of a heavy turntable platter? 15. Wow and flutter are: 1. Changes in power output of an amplifier. 2. Distortion caused by variations in turntable or tape deck motor speed. 3. Irregularities in the human voice. 16. What are the main benefits of electronics tuning? 1. More accurate than manual tuning. 2. Lower cost than manual tuning. 3. Provides convenient remote control tuning. 17. What does the term "capture ratio" mean? 18. What is an IC? 19. What do tape monitor circuits do? 20. What is the TS-100? FREE INSTALLATION IN MINUTES . . WRITTEN GUARANTEE For as long as you own car. Guarantee hon- * & VETS , /-----. your U INuw, Introducing the Fisher TS-100 T-shirt. It's at least a $3.50 value, as you know if you've priced T-shirts lately. And we're selling it to you for only $1. Not only that, but we're making it easy for you to avoid paying anything for the T-shirt. ,{.ZY A, MIPI Just ask any Fisher salesman any of the twenty questions in this ad, and, if he doesn't know the answer, you win the shirt. And we have a heart-to-heart talk with that salesman. 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