Page -Friday, March 31, 1978-The Michigan Daily 4nd the winner is .. . McKinley has 'worst lease' by RICHARD BERKE A tenant of McKinley Properties ren- tal company has won the Coalition for Better=-Iousing's (CBH) "Worst Lease Contest," the group announced yester- day Ab6,t t fifty leases were entered in the contest, the winning lease being the one contaihing the most deceptive or unen- FIRST IS mILLIARDS and ten come all tie other games. BILLIARDS AT THE UNION M a forceable clauses. According to CBH members, the winning lease includes 13 such questionable clauses and is used by McKinley - the city's largest rental firm - for 600 apartments in Ann Ar- bor. THE WINNING tenant insisted that he not be identified, saying he'll have enough .trouble subletting his apar- tment this summer without publicity. The tenant will be treated to free legal advice from a housing attorney over lunch at Dominick's restaurant. As for CBH's "Best Lease Contest" - which only landlords were invited to en-a ter - there is no winner because there were no entries. CBH members emphasized that McKinley has done nothing unlawful by including deceptive, unenforceable clauses in its leases. CBH is sponsoring the "Truth in Renting" proposal which will appear on Monday's city election ballot. The proposal would ban such questionable leases. "We can't say they (McKinley) have the worst lease in Ann Arbor," said CBH spokesperson Tim Kunin. "But it did take two attorneys two hours to go over the winning lease (for questionable clauses)." Dormies to get freebie (Continued from Page 1) "The whole catch is, assuming the students get the products free and use it, hopefully they will go out and buy it," Canu said. 13-30 executives encourage their clients to reinforce the distribution of 4 4 SEI and MSA Elections, a h Will He Held the second week of April We urge all undergraduate and graduate students at the School of Education to make sure that candi- dates from their division run for office or that they themselves file for candidacy. Please file for can- didacy at the SEI office, SEB between the hours of 12 and 4 p.m. before APRIL 7, 1978. For further information, all 763-1244 their samples by advertising in one or all of their student publications. AND 13-30 MAKES known to its clien- ts that it doesn't take the sampler business lightly. The corporation con- ducts follow-through audits and has shipment verifications to assure itself that each dorm resident receives a kit. The corporation even publishes bar graphs to show companies that, "Con- clusively," students are "extremely responsive to the sampling effort." The University agreed last year to allow 13-30 to bring its wares to the campus. The University Housing Coun- cil will take charge of dorm distribution efforts. Canu said-there will be a different kit given to males and females but "nothing controversial" will be con- tained in them. "No cigarettes, no liquor, no contraceptives in our kits," he declared. Daily Photo by ANDY FREEBERG THE 1977 HASH BASH wasn't all fun as the despairing expression on this little girl's face suggests while a police officer drags her mother away. High times expected at Bash (Continued from Page1) "The thrill of being defiant by skip- ping school and of being on TV and in the papers attracts high schoolers more than smoking dope on the college cam- pus does," says White. At Ann Arbor Huron High, principal Paul Meyers says, "We haven't heard a thing. There was more talk last year. Skipping classes - that's the thing to do. Saturday will make for a smaller Due town increased interest in PSYCHIC PHENOMENA, LADY ATHENA is conducting a seminar and workshop, April 1st and 2nd, 1978, at the Ra- mada Airport Inn, on some phases of this subject. Classes are limited to the first 30 persons registering. LADY ATHENA PSYCHIC PHENOMENA WORKSHOP TOPICS INCLUDE: crowd. It may not be part of the weekend plans." 1 CITY AND suburban high schools around the Detroit area report no talk or advertising of the Bash. They also claim that the number of high school dope users has diminished significantly in the last year, cutting into Bash clien- tele. An estimated 3,000 to 5,000 people attended last year's Bash. University students seem to have mixed feelings about attending this year's Bash. "I'm not going," says ar- chitecture freshman Bob Perry. "It's not a big thing. It's a chance for friends to smoke hash in the Diag. Being at Bursley, it won't bother me." An opposite view was expressed by sophomore Marcus. Veal, a pharmacy major. "Last year, the police moved in on the people. I didn't want to be arrested, or seen on TV by my parents. Other than that, I'd go smoke down with my friends." LSA SOPHOMORE Kathy Erwin comments "hlike it because it's a neat tradition which shows off Ann Arbor as the liberator of harsh drug laws." The Hash Bash was originally con- ceived as a political event designed to dramatize students' contempt for tough laws against smoking marijuana. In 1972, the First Annual Hash Bash celebrated Michigan's new marijuana law. The law lowered the penalty for possession of dope to a maximum 90- day jail sentence plus a $1,000 fine. "We'll bust anyone with funny-looking or funny smelling cigarettes," the police said then. Last year, police threatened possible one-year imprisonments and a $500 fine, but only enforced the $5 misdemeanor ordinance. " a " " 0 TELEPATHY CLAIRVOYANCE AUTOVOYANCE CANDLE RITUAL USE FOR SELF HELP DISCUSSION OF WITHCRAFT REINCARNATION Call for moreInformation-981-0719 ,. r, ~n~Vre l~oirigs. (..hres c* safe.plac? 1 _. - L " i E t t i I I Ii RUN in LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT ELECION of April 10-12 President /Vice-President 7 + Representation Seats Open Filing Deadline: 5:00 p.m., March 31st Forms available in LSA office-4001 Mich. Union in MSA office-3909 Mich. Union Weekdays 7 In the heart of Ann Arbor's theatre district 300 S. Thayer A Gourmet Performance a.m. -2 a.m. Weekends 8 a.m. - 2 a.m.. - A k J -A., Idoh, When you've more to store than you bar- gained for, you can now store more than ever before, securely. At "Your Attic", you can select the space you need from 13 differently sized storage bays ranging from 5' x 10' to a whopping 30' x 40'. YO 2500 Any t UK lTTKI i I moor S. Industrial n Arbor, MI I )73-2212 F-STADIUM Bt V0 A.. PACKARD i m I i m i m I