" Page 2-The Michigan Daily- Thursday, April 2,1992 NORML Continued from page 1 because the University asked him to view a videotape of last year's Hash Bash before ruling on the case. "The videotape did not show any violent activity or personal injuries," he said. He also criticized the University's statement that a forum on drug use last night served as an appropriate substitute for the Diag rally. "It is obvious that such a forum is not an 'adequate alternative' that would justify the University's denying the Diag permit," he said. Shelton asserted that he thinks the University denied the permit in a conscious effort to silence NORML's voice. "It is apparent to the Court that the University refused to issue the sound permit to NORML because the University did not want to be seen as aiding the presentation of the NORML marijuana legalization 'I expected it to turn out this way.' -Adam Brook NORML Secretary rally, or the 'Hash Bash' in any way," he said. "This is precisely the sort of content based prior restraint of speech and assembly which our Constitution prohibits." NORML Secretary Adam Brook said he is pleased with the decision, but not surprised by it. "I expected it to turn out this way," he said. "I was happy to see that the judge agreed with us." Brook added that he finds it ironic that Judge Shelton issued his decision on April 1, which was the traditional date of Hash Bash. The rally was moved to the first Saturday in April last year. Shelton also said that he decided this case on the same basis as the one in 1990 when the University also refused NORML a permit. "The University still fails to un- derstand the basic premise of consti- tutional law that a peaceable person exercising his or her rights to free speech may not be restricted because of the fear of how others may react to the exercise of those rights," he said. "I think that Judge Shelton's decision is 100% correct and that the appeals court will uphold it," said Michael Warren, chair of the Michigan Student Assembly's Student Rights Commission. Calvin and Hobbes by Bill Watterson TiWS ARTICLE. SAY~S ThNfTW 8 GESy, osr CNURE~N NAV, WTCkED 9000 o oURS OF TV "- A ©UATER OF WVEIR, WNYZNG LVES ! 5OEPR\WQ. OF CULTVRA&L RFEENCS! VMA tGORMW CF COUJNTLESS AM~A.ZNG PR00UCCs.' J a NWRM ! I W '~AW TW. BEDTIME,tIQCAN GET 1NA FW PR.ECOU\S EXTRA HOURS ARD~ CMCGA UP A, BIT! -- REMEDIAt_ NAP ME VEGET AT'tot1. t.EARN TN1S TNEME s)%, pK? 0 0 a RESULTS Continued from page 1 "We want to look at what we can do to stabilize tuition by either freezing it, which would be ideal, or tying it to inflation," he said Fox and VanValkenburgh said they think the change of leadership from CC to the Progressive Party will change the atmosphere of MSA. "I think with Ede and myself running meetings, the civility of the discourse will increase," VanValkenburgh said. "We're shooting to be more active and rep- resent student interests to the admin- istration as well as possible and keep the infighting to a minimum." "The agenda of MSA is going to change to a more progressive one, more pro-active," Fox said. MSA Election Director Carrie Pittman estimated Tuesday that all ballot results would be available by 6 a.m. yesterday, but a lack of tal- Hers made this impossible. Those involved with these elec- tions said scantron ballots are a good possibility for next fall's elections to make the tabulation process quicker and more efficient. "It would make things easier be- cause we wouldn't have to pay peo- ple to count ballots. It would be much easier and it would definitely save MSA money," Rules and Elections Chair Brian Kight said. Kight said scantron ballots would make results available at 8 a.m. the morning following elections. .Official results for the remaining school repre-entatives, oversight board members and resolution ques- tions will be available today. HI FI STUDIO Big screen projectors for rent/sale1 Watch U-M hoops on the big screen!! VCR Service " Stereo Service Speaker Repairs, Components Pickup & Delivery Available 215 S. Ashley 1/2 bl. north of Liberty 769.0342 Downtown Jennifer Silverberg/DAILY GRAPHIC m o AUTOCAD® FOR WINDOWS PUT THE POWER TO WORK FOR YOU! AutoCA of 3-D d tools for mappin and mu Call us how Au handleE dimens SPECIAL AUTOCAD EDUCATIONAL PRICES! COUNCIL Continued from page 1 Planning Commission; Peter Nico- las, a Democratic University grad- uate student who stresses biparti- sanship and independent thinking; and Nick Contaxes, a Libertarian and current landlord who contends that "government isn't part of the solution, it's part of the problem." Mogdis, whose campaign has focused on faults and weaknesses of the current Democrat 8-3 major- ity on the council, has been chal- lenged by Nicolas to address the is- sues. "He's not taking this race very seriously in my opinion," Nicolas said. "I think he decided that just because he has a little 'R' next to his name, all he has to do is put his name on the ballot. I think he is sadly mistaken, he is taking the voters for granted." Nicolas urged Mogdis to address 4th Ward issues as well as the other candidates in this year's race, rather than the current council. "All he says is that things are out of control in City Hall," Nicolas said. Mogdis defended himself against Nicolas' charge. "The is- sues of the city - the future of parking, the future of downtown, solid waste, taxes, micro-manage- ment of city hall - are not specifi- cally issues of the 4th Ward," Mogdis said. "Secondly, he doesn't have any record to run against. In fact, what I Ann Arbor voting wards legitimately have to run against is the performance of the majority on council which is the party he is running on. So those are the issues. Those are the issues that are impor- tant to the 4th Ward," Mogdis added. Contaxes said if elected to the Council he would work toward pri- vatizing many government services, such as trash collecting and down- town parking. "The more of this stuff that gets outside of the sphere of govern- ment, the better off we will be," Contaxes said. While no Libertarian candidate has ever received more than 200 votes in a city election, Contaxes said this is changing. "In this area, third party candi- dates are grabbing more and more of a share of the electorate," Con- taxes said. "I like to think that I could win." Nicolas, who is 21, will receive his master's degree in public policy from the University this May. His academic concentration is primarily economic forecasting. He has been attending City Council meetings and Democrat caucuses regularly for the past eight months. Both Nicolas and Mogdis said students should pay more attention to Ann Arbor city government. Mogdis said he has voted in fa- vor of allowing special exception use permits for Greek houses and co-ops as a member of the Planning Commission. 0I REL 10 Locked (DOSor MAC) REL 10 MAC Version with free upgrade to REL 11 MAC, when available REL 11386 AME with FREE Windows Extension, if requested $ 495* $750** $ 875** AD provides a complete set design and 2-D drafting r architectural, mechanical, ig, facilities applications ch more! today to see utoCAD can every LI AUCESK AREA EDCON REPRESENTATIVE * for students, faculty and staff ** for faculty, staff and graduate students DEVTRON, RUSSELL INC. G-5180 Flushing Rd., Flushing, MI (313) 732-0708 301 N. Bowery, P.O. Box 385, Gladwin, MI (517) 426-6574 400 Ann St., Ste. 212, Grand Rapids, MIl (616) 364-6515 4724 Lake Leelanau Dr., Traverse City, MI (616) 271-4794 AutoCAD is a registered trademark of Autodesk, Inc. i1 ion in design and drafting. n n 94 }K "!xH _uat rn n d KUUMB A Office of the Vice President Panhellenic Council Black Student Union Washington E. Liberty N. University William V r I LSA STUDENT GOVERNMENT Dept. of Communications 1&(VIEWPOINT LECTURES Hm "f J 1 p Geddes tJFQ 0 Zdis on a I I rm-e m { .....>:v Un ersity sz 44 .. ....... v ....ii :::::.! - V LL 7 a ::? ": ... .. ... .. .. .... m m The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during the Fall and Winter terms by students at the University of Michigan. On-campus subscription rate for falVwinter 91-92 is $30; all other subscriptions via first class U.S. mail, winter semester only, are $80. Subscriptions must be prepaid. The Michigan Daily Is a member of the Associated Press and the Associated Collegiate Press. ADDRESS: The Michigan Daily, 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1327. PHONE NUMBERS (All area code 313): News 764-0552; Opinion 747-2814; Arts 763-0379; Sports 747-3336; Circulation 764-0558; Classified advertising 764-0557; Display advertising 764-0554; Billing 764-0550. " "Jungle Fever" "Mo' Better Blues" "Do the Right Thing" "School Daze" "She's Gotta Have It" NON-STUDENTS: $8.50 in advance $10.00 at door 0 0 0 STUDENTS: $6.50 in advance $8.50 at door - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -u --1i NEWS Henry Goldblatt, Managing Editor EDITORS: David Rhiingold, Bethany Robertsonr, Stelun,. Vines, Knnoth Walker STAFF: Laura Addedey, Lad Barager, Hope Calati, Barry Cohen, Ben Deci, Lauren Denner, Erin Einhom, Rende Huce, Loretta Le. Andrew Levy, Robi~n Ltwin, Nicole Malonlant, Sarah McCarthy. Travis McReyniods, Josh, Moctler, Sheley Morrison, Melis Peerless, Karen Pier, Mona Qureehi, Karen Sabgir, Christopher Scierer, Gwen Shaffer, PurM Shah, Jennifer Silverberg, Alan Sumser, Karen Talaski. David Wartowski. Chastity Wilson. LIST: David Sherdson OPINIOI Yael Citro, Geoffrey Eade, Amitava Mazumdar, Editors STAFF: Mat Adler, Jenny Alix, Renee Bushey, Daren Hubbard, David Leiher, An Rotenberg, Dave Row, David Shepardson, Steve Smal, Daniel Stewart. SPORTS John Myo, Managing Editor EDITORS: Josh Dubow, Albert Lin, Jeff W~iloms STAFF: Meg Belson, Andy DeKor, Kimberly DeSempelare, Matthew Dodge, Shawn DuFreen., Joni Durst, Bret Forrest , JiFos, Ryan Herringbn, Mice Hill, Bruce Inosencio, Dan Lima, Rod Loewenthal, Sharon Lundy, Adam Miller, R~i Mitvalskcy, Bernadette Ramsey, Mike Randlio, Tim Rardin, Greg Richardson, Chad Safran, Todd Schoenhaus, Jeff Sheran, Tim Spolar, Andy Stable, Ken Sugiura, Benson Taylor. ARTS Elizabeth Lenhard, Michael John Wison, Editors EDITORS: Mark Bineff (Fikn), Diane Freden (Rne & Performing Arts), Alan J. Hogg, Jr. (Books), JuAle Komom (Weekend tc., Anneftt. Petruso (MuJsic). STAFF: Carine Bacon, Greg Bales, Margo Baumgart, Skot Bed, Melees Ros Bemardo, Jon Bilk, Andrew J. Cahn, Jonathan Chait. Ri"'ard S. Davis, Gabriel Felderg, Rosanne Freed, Forrest Green III, Jessie Holladay, Aaron Hamburger, Stepen Henderson, Jonathan HigginsNm Hodaei. Roger Hsia. Marie Jacobson, Andrea Kachudas, Kristen Knudsen, Rona Kobol, Chise Lpley. Jenny McKee, Kristen MCMurphy, Amy Meng, John Morgan, Michels Philip, Dan Poux, Austin Ratner, Jeff Rosenberg, Valee Shuman, Christne Slovey, Scott Storing, Aiesa Strauss, Carrie Walco, Michele Weger, Sarah Weidman, Josh Woh. PHOTO Kristoffer Gillette, Kenneth J. Smoller, Editors STAFF: Anthony M. Ciol, Michelle Guy, Doug Kanter, Heather Lowman, Sharon Musher, Suzis Palsy, Molly Stevens, Pau Taylor. -- . ~ . ?ra'5' :..................._................ ......... .... .._ DISPLAY SALES Shannon Burke, Manager ASSISTANT MANAGER: Laurel Wilkinson STAFF: Greg AniG, Aizah Bahan, Michael Barry, Yasin Chouhry, Meghan Cleary, MonsDas, Kim Duly, Amy Fant Shed Frankel, Jason Gabel, Rob Galic, Amy Herr, Katy KItbey, Kristin Kirby. Eric Wuit, Mary O'Connor, Andrea Rauthort, Jul.e Rogan,. 'VA~ .K' IAnvil f) 1001)