*The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 4, 1990 - Page 5 __ Man guilty of selling2 Live Crew FORT LAUDERDALE (AP) - Jurors deliberated less than three hours before convicting Charles Freeman on a misdemeanor obscen- ity charge. He was arrested by undercover Broward County sheriffs deputies June 8 for selling the Miami rap group's album "As Nasty As They Wanna Be" in his E-C Records store. The case went to a jury of five women and one man after final ar- guments this morning. Freeman could get a year in jail and a $1,000 fine. "It doesn't represent my commu- nity where E-C Records is!" Freeman shouted as he left the courthouse. "It's unfair. The jury was all white. They don't know. where E-C Records is. They do't know a... thing about the ghetto." Prosecutors contended the album exceeds the limits of community standards and free speech with ex- plicit and sometimes violent refer- ences to sex. Freeman was arrested two days after U.S. District Judge Jose Gonzalez ruled the lyrics were obscene. But in his closing argument, de- fense attorney Bruce Rogow told the jury that "one person's vulgarity is another person's art" and argued that the jury could not convict Freeman if they found any artistic merit in the group's album. Assistant State Attorney Leslie Robson argued that the right to free speech is not absolute, saying: "The First Amendment does not give you the right to say what you want, when you want and where you want. With rights and freedom come responsibility." As the jurors began deliberating, alternate juror Sheryl Salamon, who sat through the trial but was German leaders promise not to fo BERLIN (AP) - Leaders of a new Germany rushed to assure the world last night that it would strive for peace in the future and would never forget the dark lessons of its Nazi past. As most of the nation savored its first hours of unity and sovereignty after nightlong celebrations, leftist radicals protesting unification ram- paged in Berlin. Police fired tear gas and water cannons in street battles, and about 50 people were arrested. Soviet President Mikhail Gor- bachev, widely credited with making unification possible, will visit Ger- many next month, a government spokesman said yesterday. In a mes- sage to governments worldwide, Chancellor Helmut Kohl pledged Germany would never again pose the territorial claims that marked Ger- many from its initial unification in 1871 to its defeat and division in World War II. "In the future, only peace will rget their emanate from German soil," Kohl said. "At the same time, we stand by our moral and legal responsibilities that arise from German history," Kohl added. That was a reference to the Nazi past and the Holocaust, which claimed the lives of 6 million Jews. President Richard von Weizslicker raised the same themes in his speech at the ceremony in Berlin's Philhar- monic hall. "The Nazi terror and the war it caused inflicted untold serious injus- tice and suffering on almost all of Europe and on us," he said. "We continuously recall the vic- 4 past separation without the war started by Germany under Hitler," said von Weizsalcker, whose own father was convicted of two Nazi war crimes for his role as a Foreign Ministry offi- cial. Von Weizsacker said: "For the first time, we Germans are not creat- ing a point of contention on the Eu- ropean agenda." The rebirth of Germany as the greatest economic power in Europe has worried its neighbors, particu- larly Poland, one-third of whose ter- ritory once belonged to Germany. Kohl singled out Poland when say- ing that a future Germany will "make no territorial claims against anyone." Kohl, however, reiterated plans to amend Germany's constitution to send German troops to the Persian Gulf. He said a united and sovereign Germany was willing to help U.N. efforts in "protecting and restoring peace." tims." Among the several hundred in- vited guests was Heinz Galinski, an Auschwitz death camp survivor and now the leader of Germany's Jewish community. "No one among us will forget that there never would have been a Guilty verdict AP Po Fort Lauderdale record store owner Charles Freeman fought back tears yesterday as he was found guilty for violating Florida's Obscenity law by selling the 2 Live Crew album "As Nasty as They Wanna Be." Supplies for Gulf troops cost Pentagon half-billion dollars not needed on the final panel, said she would have voted for acquittal. "I was very offended by it, espe- cially the lyrics, but I have to ques- tion whether there is not artistic value," she said. "It's music, it's still music." ,It's unfair. The jury was all white. They don't know where E- C Records is. They don't know a... thing about the ghetto ' -Charles Freeman, Owner of E-C Records In the final day of testimony Tuesday, a psychologist testified that the group's music may be degrading or humorous, but it's not sexually stimulating. Merry Haber, a clinical psychol- ogist in Miami who has been in practice for 25 years, testified in Freeman's defense that she saw no evidence rap music arouse prurient interest, an essential part of the U.S. Supreme Court definition of obscenity. She said she gave the album to about 15 of her patients to get their opinions. The women found it de- grading, and both sexes said it was somewhat humorous. All deemed it boring rather than sexually stimulating, she testified. Broward County Judge Paul Backman has told jurors they should find the album obscene if it appeals to "morbid, shameful interest in sex" and violates the standards of average residents of Broward County WASHINGTON (AP) - The value of the food, clothing, and med- ical goods needed to resupply U.S. troops in the Mideast has already passed a half-billion dollars, draining inventories at Pentagon supply de- pots and spawning lucrative new contracts - $100 million worth in the last week alone. The deployment of some 170,000 troops more than 7,000 miles from home has forced the Pentagon to scrap plans to cut purchases of the modern-day C-ration, Meals Ready to Eat, and to ask manufacturers to quickly supply uniforms and other gear designed for use in the desert. Food and clothing are by far the most needed items being ordered from the Pentagon's nationwide supply orientation. Officials at the major depots say most orders now are being filled from existing stocks but that inventories are being drained as the deployment nears the two- month mark. As of Tuesday, the Pentagon de- pot that handles orders for food, clothing, and medical supplies said it had received 47,208 requisitions for $563 million worth of goods directly related to Operation Desert Shield, the code name for the Pentagon's re- sponse to Iraq's Aug. 2 invasion of Kuwait. The orders wer6 for $55.8 million in medical supplies, $293 million in food and $214 million in clothing and textiles. Included in those orders were re- quests for nearly 40smillion meals - 30 million MREs and 7.8 mil- lion servings of hot meals packaged in ready-to-heat trays. The new MRE orders were made three days after the Pentagon awarded Wornick Family Foods of San Car- los, Tex., a $7.6 million contract to supply the Army, by February, with 400,000 canned rations of dehydrated beef, pork, and shrimp. Also on order are thousands of new, desert uniforms and suits de- signed to protect the troops against chemical weapons should Iraq un- leash its considerable arsenal of mus- tard and nerve gases. s Interested in ADVERTISING? We're Looking for you!!! THE MICHIGAN DAILY is looking for enthusiastic people who are ecstatic about advertising! No experience necessary! Pick up an application today at: The Student Publications Building 420 Maynard (Behind LS&A Building and next to S.A.B.) Aprt on o to D JoithDaI PSYCHOLOGY MAJORS PSI CHI The National Honor Society in Psychology is now accepting applications Requirements include: -12 graded credits in Psychology beyond intro level - Major or Minor in Psychology - 3.3 Overall GPA - 3.5 GPA in Psychology (including stats) DEADLINE IS OCTOBER 5, 1990 Pick up Applications in K-106 West Quad ------------- I WCC Continued from page 1 worked in the center of their special interest. The center was a grass roots or- ganization founded on the motto "Women helping women to help themselves," according to a collec- tive statement to the press. Mienhuis said the center concen- trated on "helping women discover resources so they can solve the problem themselves." The organization was unique be- cause it covered many women's is- sues. It provided workshops on self defense, a feminist library and dealt with issues from PMS to sexual assault on its phone hotline. The center also focused on basic needs such as food and rent money, helping women make the transition between financial assistance and fi- nancial independence said Lynn D'Orio, a former Crisis Center volunteer. "We dealt with all issues instead of just specialized ones. Any issue women had we dealt with. That's what set us apart," Henes said. Callers were guaranteed to re- ceive a female counselor. "It was a space for only women, and the crisis center was geared toward women... it was a place to call where you were guaranteed of getting a woman on the phone," said third-year law stu- dent Beth Grossman, another volunteer at the center. Approximately 85 percent of the volunteers were University students, said D'Orio. Community members and EMU students made up the rest of the volunteer pool. Mienhuis said she would miss "working as a collective, the group process and women working together to make social change." -a N Advertising/Marketing/PR " The Arts Comparative Legal Systems " European L O N D O N Economy and Politics " Management/ Economics/Finance " Journalism/Broadcast/ PR I Media" Public Relations " Business " Advertising PA .~ * STourism " Fashion " The Arts" Government WASHINGTON 1 - Health Care Clinic of Ann Arbor 3012 Packard Road " 971-1970 WHY WAIT ? Alpha Sigma Phi E x t e n d e d R u s h MASS MEETING For program details complete the coupon below and mail it to: Boston University International Programs 232 Bay State Road Boston; MA 02215 617/353-9888 BOSTON U1 Politics Business/Economics " Legal Systems International Relations " Journalism/Communi- cations - Health Fields . The Arts Each internship program includes: up to 16 Boston University semester-hour credits, full-time internships, course work taught by local faculty, centrally located housing, and individualized placements for virtually every academic interest. NIVERSITY An equal opportunity, affirmative action institution A representative from Boston University will be on campus: Information Session Friday, October 5, 1990 o)flfl- xflfl DIR