w. _"" . m ,Iqmww, -1W IRW lqw -W ~~~rapt WHEN EATING OUT IN ANN ARBOR YOU'LL FIND A WIDE VARIETY OF RESTAURANTS, BUT ONLY AT 315 S. STATE ST. WILL YOU FIND THE TRUE COMFORTS OF HOME. CHOICE CUT MEATS, FRESH CRISP GARDEN SALADS, HOMEMADE SOUPS, QUALITY SERVICE AND A COMFORTABLE AT- MOSPHERE IS ALWAYS GUARANTEED. 315 S. STATE ST., ANN ARBOR 663-0261 "Since it became an amendment, we've had years of peace, quiet, and de- clining use ... Until Belcher bought it. The citizens called a truce, why can't we leave it alone? In his 1977 mayoral campaign, Belcher pledged not to inter- fere with the law. He said it worked," Morris says. Belcher initiated the repeal drive in October by trying to pursuade council to put the proposal on the ballot. He failed to get the support even of his Republican allies, and on November 15 he dropped the effort. But a group of citizens launched an unorganized petition drive to put the repeal proposal on the April ballot. After the drive failed to get even half of the required 5,200 signatures, council Republicans voted to put the proposal on the ballot anyway. B ELCHER DENIES that he is seek- ing even harsher penalties, and says instead "I'm just trying to clear the books of a law that has bothered me for years., "Whether the repeal succeeds or not," Belcher says, "it won't make one hill of beans difference." "I remember the campus survey The Michigan Daily conducted the day after the repeal proposal went on the ballot. They asked people what they thought of it. About a third said 'Yeah, I'll look at the proposal,' half said 'I'll vote against it,' and the rest said 'I don't give a rat's ass about it.' The citizens are going to look at this issue and they're going to say 'we'll vote no on the damn thing,' or- 'we'll vote yes,' and it'll be very casual." Belcher scoffs at the publicity the issue has received. "If I hold a press con- ference on some important issue, I'll get The Michigan Daily, The Ann Arbor News, and maybe two radio stations. But if I say I'm having a press con- ference on the pot law, I'll get AP, UPI, every Detroit radio station, all four television stations, all the Detroit newspapers, plus the local folks. And it just isn't that important." Belcher says he objects to the amen- dment because he feels it doesn't belong in the charter, and it gives people a "false sense of security." "I just don't think a law like this should be in the city charter. It's the equivalent of putting a speed limit in the U.S. Constitution," he says. "Also," he says, "we have a lot of young people who come into Ann Arbor thinking that for sale, use, or possession of less than one ounce of marijuana, they'll get a $5 ticket. I contend that one dozen of them have been charged under ..- E AbSM0 SERVING BREAKFAST - LUNCH - DINNER MON. thru SAT.: 8:00 A.M. to 7:00 P.M. SUNDAY: 9:30 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. i 40 i Crossing the Impasse: UN 'U' CRISIS isnference on Iciirctlisa.. CLor.#o . g oy 0,A TE616/ Cd Friday March 18 10am-2prm Opdiemul Rygistrutiem - Vule. 7 30pm Optieml Rygistratis - Rckhmui 8 OOpm Speakers: -Rep. L. Jondahl, E. Lansing -Dr. B. Frye, V.P. Acad. Affairs -Dr. B. Bryant, Prof. Nat. Res. RING IN THE MONTH OF MARCH AT RETZEL 0 e' \ 0 Go c oOJr s o - e s9 q Oe G eQQ 9 k 96cY Pe L , O - c de- 0\ G ' 0 - 60 120 E. Liberty 761-1470 state law. They have a false sense of security here." "Right now," Belcher says, "for small amounts a kid will probably get a $5 fine, unless the guy or gal is a total nerd and strikes the officer the wrong way. Then they might get prosecuted under state law." Ann Arbor Police Chief William Cor- bett says the criteria for a marijuana case being handled under state law are higher than the mayor thinks. According to Corbett, only cases in which a pound or more of marijuana is confiscated are taken to the county prosecutor and handled under state law. Corbett adds that the amendment contains no amount required for state prosecution, but that it is a policy of the city to send only large scale distributors to the county prosecutor. Police estimates show there were three such cases in 1980, two in 1981, five in 1982, and none so far this year. Corbett says the vast majority of cases are handled through the city, though enforcement of the amendment is "a very low priority": In the last three years, police have issued 555 marijuana violations. That number in- cludes three Hash Bashes, which Cor- bett says account for a significant number of the total. Y PSILANTI HAS a pot law almost identical to Ann Arbor's. Indeed, it was modeled after Ann Arbor's original ordinance. Ypsilanti police, however, prosecute almost all their marijuana cases through the county prosecutor, thus under state law. Many Ann Arbor residents fear police here might misconstrue a repeal vote for a vote for harsher penalties and follow Ypsilanti's policies. The tighter city ordinance also has revived fears some residents have about police harrassment in the 1970's. Current City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw says police in the '70s more actively searched for people with marijuana, and often practiced "selective enfor- cement" of the law. "There were officers I knew of who were forever looking for some defect in a car, a broken taillight, anything they could use as an excuse to pull a car over and check for pot," he says. "They looked for people who they thought fit their sterotype of someone who might have marijuana in the car." Washtenaw County Prosecuting At- torney William Delhey also says there is a problem of lack of due process and equal protection under the law. "Sup- pose you and I were smoking a joint in the Diag," he says, "and you were arrested by an Ann Arbor Police officer while I got picked up by a sherriff's deputy or state policeman. You'd probably get a $5 fine, but I'm going to jail." Corbett says his department concen- trates almost exclusively on public use of pot and that enforcement techniques and focus will not change if the new or- dinance is adopted. "People think suddenly we're going to launch an aggressive drive to enforce this new ordinance," he says, "and that's simply not true. Enfor- cement will not change one iota." "Sure there's a problem with selec- tive enforcement," Peterson says. "Police go after hard-core users. That's fine, but there are some officers who feel anyone black is a hard-core user. So you have racial discrimination. Or maybe they look for long hair and Walkmans, so there you have cultural discrimination." Peterson also says the argument that the law shouldn't be in the charter is Morris: Plays political football "silly." The charter has a lot in it besides the constitution. If you wanted to get rid of everything like the pot law, you'd have to chuck half the charter down the drain." Belcher says that besides getting the law off the charter, it is important to "haul down the flag" that attracts out- siderssto Ann Arbor to smoke pot. He says he doesn't feel Ann Arbor's reputation has been tarnished because of the law, but he does believe the city has an image as a lenient town and is a major distribution point for drugs in Southeastern Michigan. "I think the image exists, and I don't think by repealing the charter amen- dment you're going to change that image," he says. "I do think you are going to tell a lot of the young people who come to the city that they're going to get hit with a little more than five bucks." Belcher and Corbett both point to the Hash Bash as evidence that people come into the city to smoke. "Now it's just an irritating, unlawful event," Corbett said. State Rep. Perry Bullard (D-Ann Ar- bor) says "The 'flag' business is really a spurious issue. Kids don't come to Ann Arbor to smoke, they smoke where they are. There's plenty of pot around." Though the $5 law doesn't apply to juveniles, Belcher and others say their real concern lies with high school and junior high school kids. Nationally, pot use among high school kids has dropped. In a seven- year study of drug use by high school students released last month, Univer- sity researchers concluded that usage of most drugs has declined. The largest decrease, they reported, was in marijuana use. Most city officials agree that use has declined in the city as well, in spite of the "permissive attitude" the $5 law projects to some people. "I suspect whatever happened is despite the changes in the law," Faber says. Belcher agrees. "I think people are going to use marijuana like alcohol during prohibition," he says. "I don't think the law makes any difference. If Americans want to use something, they're going to use it, whether it's marijuana or illegal booze. But I do think the new ordinance is a better law." PARTICULARLY ABSENT from the debates on this issue is mention of the student v the ordinanc books in the f There was the words "si the heart of a tly student tu very low. Ft cessfully org repeal propo tee Against only 10 peopl month. Likewise, n .not unusuall) 800 new re estimate tha every year, voters hard student showi Despite co pus, students the repeal however, sho against (the feet me that n probably woi polling place one student s Political fi don't feel th major factor or failure. "Students placid group shame," Fab I liked about the students v concern; the, and they did they could ca "They may he says, "bu there's enoi among studen Bullard als ts will mobili2 "Raising the (students) t potential fo marijuana is Peterson s4 more apatheti show interest the Ann Arbo think it'll be "The conserv and people wi fighting back. "People say ban suburba harmless thar do you think 1 says. "I don't everyone goe shirts." Many have bringing the strongest criti the present re people who fe ness that the i be to cause a fought 10 yea Lax says. "These inte] harmful, and that the existe ce has any be; the reduction senseless thin Belcher call rah." "One of the specious - ar looking at the volatile and munity again, not going to don't notice t arms about it, to be." George A News editor. 9:0prn 10~pjn Q & A Session Reception Saturday March 19 9:30am Optional Rgistrtion - Union 10:00am Special Interest Workshops Student; Faculty; Staff; Alumni 11:30am issues Workshops -Tenure & Job Security -Research & Acad. Freedom - The Review Process - Redirection & Non-White Students Saturday, March 19 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Community High School N. Fifth Ave. at Detroit Street (Opposite Formers Market) ANN ARBOR, MICHIGAN DEMONSTRATIONS DISPLAYS FILMS * FOOD DISCUSSIONS SWAP SHOP ADMISSION: 25 DONATION CITY OF ANN ARBOR BICYCLE PROGRAM 994-2814 1:00pm 2:3Oprn Lunch Reflections & Discussion I 2 Weekend/March 18, 19839 15 W