The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, March 12, 1985 - Page 3 State can disregard local pot law By STEVEN E. HERZ Authorities may prosecute Michigan residents un- der state law for marijuana possession and disregard local ordinances, according to a recent Michigan State Court of Appeals ruling. In the case decided by the court last week, Lee Kay, a resident of Grass Lake, was arrested by state police within Ann Arbor city limits and was subsequently prosecuted by Washtenaw County authorities. State and county law carries a stiffer penalty than Ann Ar- bor law and includes a jail sentence. IN THE OPINION of the court, individuals charged with possession of marijuana within Ann Arbor city limits are not immune from prosecution under state law, even though the city has a $5 pot law. Assistant Washtenaw County Prosecutor Dave King, who served as public prosecutor in this case, said the court's decision does not affect Ann Arbor's ordinance. Once an arrest is made in the city, police must request prosecution under state law, and all final decisions on whether to prosecute under state or local law are made by the prosecutors. In Kay's case, concerned parents notified officials that the defendant allegedly sold drugs to children in Gallup Park in February of 1983, according to King. COURT RECORDS show that Kay also had previously been arrested and sentenced to two years of probation for delivering LSD to an undercover police officer in 1980. When he was released from probation, records show he was labeled as a "discharge without improvement." After his arraignment in 1983 for possession of marijuana; Kay appealed to the court, charging en- trapment. But the court unanimously denied his ap- peal. Kay could appeal the decision to the State Supreme Court, but his attorney said yesterday that he has not made plans to appeal. King said that "only on very, very rare occasions," such as in Kay's case, is a city ordinance disregarded so that a defendant can be prosecuted under the stif- fer state marijuana law. Daily staff member Mark Reiss contributed to this story. Gorbachev the first of a new generation, experts say Associated Press A staff member of the Soviet Embassy prepares to raise the Russian flag to half staff yesterday in Washington. The death of Soviet President Konstantin Chernenko was announced yesterday. Chernenko died Sunday. eagan won't attend funeral (Continued from Pagel) ternational policy and domestic quare near the Kremlin and stood priorities for a vast country of 276 ilently under blue skies with sunlight million people. eflecting off the golden domes of the Gorbachev is said to epitomize a new Kremlin churches to watch officials generation of Soviet leaders - un- repare the grounds for Chernenko's marked by party service under Stalin's urial in the select Kremlin cemetery. iron rule, well-educated, and reared in THE COUNTRY'S leaders, many of the postwar years that saw major ad- hem in their 70s, acted swiftly to select vances in Soviet living standards. orbachev. Because of his age, the Gorbachev, who is balding and wears Kremlin rulers might normally expect glasses, is considered highly intelligent that Gorbachev could lead the country and during several trips abroad char- until the end of the century, setting in- med his hosts with a polished manner. -HAPPENINGS- Highlight Eclipse Jazz will be sponsoring the appearance of the Aboriginal Per- cussion Choir under the direction of, Roy Brooks at the Michigan League Ballroom, at 8 p.m. A free workshop will also be held at 5 p.m., in the league. Film Cinema Guild & Dramatic Arts Center - 23rd Annual Ann Arbor Film Festival, 7, 9, & 11 p.m., Michigan Theater. Jewish Law Students Union - The Frisco Kid, 8:30 p.m., 1429 Hill Street. Performances Ark -New Talent Night, Bob Franke, 2 for 1 admission, 8 p.m., 637 Main Street. School of Music - New World String Quartet, 8 p.m., Rackham Auditorium; University Choir, 8 p.m., Hill Auditorium. PTP - Hot'l Baltimore, 8 p.m., Trueblood Theater. Speakers Computing Center - Kari Gluski, "Text Formatting with TeX, Part I," 9:30 a.m., Room 3046, East Engineering Building; "Chalk Talk," "Exam- ples, of Tell-A-Graf Bar Charts," 12:10 p.m., Room 1011 NUBS; Forrest Har- tman, "The Macintosh PC as an MTS Terminal," 1:30 & 3:30 p.m., UNYN Terminal Room. Psychology - Martin Mayman, "Triptych of Current Conflicts in Psychoanalysis," 8p.m., Rackham Amphitheater. Chemistry - Bertram Fraser-Reid, "Carbohydrate Versus Carbocyclic Alpha-Enones," 4 p.m., Room 1200 Chemistry Building. Chinese Studies - Vern Terpstra, "Chinese International Marketing," noon, Lane Hall Commons room. English - Deborah Shuger, "The Grand Style in Renaissance Rhetoric," 8p.m., Rackham East conference Room. Germanic Language & Literature - Bernhard Greiner, "Mit der Er- zahlung gehe ich in den od: Kontinuitat und Wandel des Erzahlens im Schaf- fen von Christa Wolf," 8 p.m., Rackham West Conference Room. Law School - Melvin Eisenberg, "Social Propositions in Judicial Reasoning," 4p.m., Room 120 Hutchins Hall. Russian & East European Studies - Glenn Palmer, "U.S.-Soviet Strategic Interactions," 8p.m., Room 25 Angell Hall. Ann Arbor Public Library - Dr. Richmond-Abott, 12:10 D.m.. Meeting Room 343 South Fifth Avenue. Engineering - J. Liv, "C-Net A Cost-Effective Mutistage Interconnection Network," 10:30 a.m., Room 1084, East Engineering Building. Meetings University Alanon - noon, Room 3200, Union. Ann Arbor Go Club -7 p.m., Room 1433 Mason Hall. Michigan Student Assembly - 7:30 p.m., Assembly -Chambers, Room 3909, Union. AIESEC - International Bisiness Management Club, 5:15 p.m., Room 131 Business Administration Building. Unicef -7:30 p.m., Founders Room of the First Presbyterian Church, 1432 Washtenaw. Center for Eating Disorders - 7:30 p.m. Human Growth Center, 2002 Hogback, Suite 13. Miscellaneous His House Christian Fellowship - Bible Study - 7:30 p.m., 925 East Ann Street. Program in American Institutions - Workshop, 3 p.m., Pond Room A & B, Union. CRLT - Workshop, Alfred Storey, "Speaking Skills," 3:30 p.m., Rackham East Conference Room; Workshop, Wilbert McKeachie, "Improving Classroom Lectures," 7 p.m., 109 East Madison. HRD - Workshop, Catherine Lilly, "Improving Your Listening Skills," 1 p.m., Room 130 B LSA Building. English Language & Literature - Fiction Readings, William Holinger, 4 p.m., Rackham West Conference Room. Art B'eak - George Morland, 'ypsy Encampment with Seared Man Breaking Firewood," 12:10 p.m., Museum of Art. Microcomputer Education Center - Workshop, "Orientation to the Macintosh,"1 p.m., Room 3113, School of Education Building. Progressive Student Network - film and discussion, 7 p.m., Bursley Hall, R n_ MiTf arkldeu INal (Continued from Page 1) defense plan to human rights in the Soviet Union. Gorbachev, who will be the youngest Soviet leader since Vladimir Lenin, is ,. expected to gain favor with the Soviet people because of his relatively young age. BUT MORE importantly, the change in Soviet leadership reflects the begin- ning of a new generation taking power in the Kremlin, said University political science Prof. Charles Bright. "The most significant thing was not that Gorbachev was born after the revolution, but that he rose (in the ranks of the Communist party) after Stalin. Gorbachev is of the generation that has come along since Stalin died," Bright said. "I don't think the leader- ship changes are the crucial issue. The generational shift is the most important thing. "If he consolidates his power, he'll be in power for the next 20 years," he said. BRIGHT SAID the long-term align- ments within the Soviet system among various interests such as the military and educational bureaucracies will be more important. "The namehmatters in the sense that his cronies have the inside track," Bright said. How much power Gor- bachev's political allies have will determine how much control they will have over the Communist party. "It's the same when you elect a president - it's not necessarily the name, but the people he brings with him,' ,'he said. FORMER Secretaries of the State Henry Kissinger and Alexander Haig both agreed that there would be a shift to a new generation for leadership. Kissinger said Gorbachev will need two to four years to consolidate his power. "In the Soviet system, when a new man takes over, he has to establish his position first, and it is not automatic that he can just give orders," Kissinger said in New Orleans. "He has to get his own people in." GORBACHEV'S relative youth will eventually lead to a realignment of power in the Soviet Unioin, Kissinger said, but that does not mean the younger generation of Soviet leaders will be easier for American leaders to deal with. "Nobody really knows what the younger generation thinks in the Soviet Union," Kissinger said. "We don't have any contact with them." Former Secretary of State Alexander Haig said the rise of Gorbachev means the older leadership will be moved aside. "IT'S WELL to remember, here is a fellow who is 54 years old and his in- cumbency would probably spell some very important changes in the older hierarchy - (Foreign Minister Andrei) Gromyko, (Politburo member Viktor) Grishin and others that stand way above him in age terms," Haig said in one of a series of television appearan- ces. Though the U.S. and the Soviet Union have arms reduction talks. scheduled for today, political science Prof. Raymond Tanter said Chernenko's death will probably not jeopardize the talks. "For the Soviets, the main reason for the talks is to influence the democratic public," Tanter said. Reduction of ar- ms, he said, was not the Soviets' main objective. "THE PRIMARY audience for the Soviet Union is the peace movement in Western Europe. The reason why the Soviets would want to stay in the talks is to slow down the scheduled deployment of U.S. missiles in five NATO countries," he said. One man in the Soviet government who is expected to gain clout through the latest leadership change is foreign minister Andrei Gromyko. "Gromyko's power in foreign policy will be enhanced even more than it is now," he said. "His power has grown because he is a survivor who has dealt with foreign policy over a long period of time." BUT IF Gorbachev manages to secure a strong hold on the Soviet hierarchy, political science Prof. William Zimmerman said he expects Gromyko will eventually be forced out. "I think Gromyko likes running foreign affiars, and I think he will con- tinue on it," Zimmerman said, "Later on, perhaps, Gromyko will be older, and I will not be surprised if Gorbachev asks Gromyko to retire." However, Zbigniew Brezezinski, who served as national security advisor to President Carter, sees a darker side of Gorbachev. "We shouldn't look so much at the suit, or the way he conducts himself, or at whether he waves to Western correspondents, or his wife carries a Gucci handbag," Brzezinski said. "One hs to look at what the man stands for, what his career was. In that respect, I expect a more skillful, energetic, but in many respects more dangerous sort of leader." / v Aid hike set for minorities (Continued from Page1)' SEVERAL student leaders said they feared that valuable input from University community members out- side of the vice president's office was lost because the administration refused to make the minority report public. Originally, Frye had proposed to create a University commission com- posed of faculty, students and ad- ministrators, to discuss the contents of Sudarkasa's minority report. But that commission has not yet been set up. Roderick Linzie, the Michigan Student Assembly's black student researcher who met with Frye yester- ;day, said that Frye is now considering forming the commission. "HE INDICATED that as soon as he talks with Sudarkasa and (University President Harold) Shaprio that they would address the issue of the com- mission as outlined in the October 1983 memo to the regents," Linzie said. Students say the advantage of con- sulting students is their first hand ex- perience with the problems the Univer- sity is attempting to address. - "Wehear the complaints freshmen have," said Ronald Kirland, ex- president of Bursley's Minority Coun- cil. He said his own view is that the at- mosphere at the University is a minority student's biggest problem, not financial aid or lack of familiarity with the University. "This is such a cold place as far as the clasroom is concerned," Kirland said. "Everyone is so cutthroat." Kirkland recommends that students be better prepared for the rigors of University life. The University's office of Affirmative Action's 1984-85 annual report, also released yesterday, reported overall minority enrollment at 11.3 percent. Black enrollment showed its first gain in 10 years as it climbed to 5.1 percent from 4.9 percent. Free shots fight measles (Continued from Page 1) cold symptoms, according to Winfield. He said fatigue and pain when looking at bright lights are also common. Three or four days after a person is infected with the disease, Winfield said, a rash starts at the back of the neck and spreads gradually to the rest of the body. Five days after the rash appears, the persot usually recovers, he said. THE MEASLES VIRUS is contagious four days before and four days after the rash occurs. People born between 1957 and 1968 have a higher risk of contracting the disease because the vaccinations used then were not widely distributed and were often ineffective. Those who have already had the disease are not suscep- tible. Last year, a similar outbreak of measles in Markley dormitory spurred an intense innoculation drive in all of the dorms. This year's outbreak resulted in fewer inoculations because many dorm residents received vac- cinations last year. "This is the season for measles," Winfield said. "No one knows why the virus strikes at this time - it just does." .,.. T H Want To Study MEDICINE VETERINARY MEDICINE ROSS UNIVERSITY Offers a Viable Alternative " American-Style Curricula " Fully Qualified Faculties From United States and Britain " Graduates Eligible For Picture it. A backdrop of snow-capped mountain peaks, white water rivers and lush wildflower fields. Now add a national reputation for excellence and courses ranging from Shakespeare to rock climbing. The University of Colorado-Boulder Summer Session offers a spectacular array of academic and recreational classes, professional performing arts and outdoor activities and a distin- guished guest and resident faculty. Send for our free Course Bulletin. Classes begin June 10, 1985. eas- ,u o 0 ,cM G NA J,