Opening Da,y1994 Today: Detroit at Boston, 1:05 p.m. Last night: Cardinals B Reds 4 Iil r 4F 4v t : u iy' 4 S I One hundred three years of editorial freedom Vet~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ C---------A--,---g-- odaApi 4 94 99 heMchgn al i I 5,000 fiock to Diag to support marijuana use By JAMES M. NASH and MICHELLE LEE THOMPSON DAILY STAFF REPORTERS Some 5,000 people - clean-cut University students, straggly hippie holdouts and even the occasional mari- | juana opponent-flocked to the Diag Saturday to push for marijuana legal- ization during the 23rd annual Hash Bash. A lineup of speakers including some of the nation's best-known marl- juana advocates took "pot-shots" at President Clinton, University officials and legislation aimed at cracking m down on marijuana use. The pungent scent of marijuana 4 ..-drifted through the crowd as police U arrested 69 people, primarily for man- m juana use. Several arrests were for n Ezs &indecent exposure and weapons pos- session. Political rhetoric filled the air al EVAN PETRIE/Daily most as thickly as the smoke from National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) spokesperson Adam Brook addresses a crowd at the 23rd annual Hash Bash Saturday. hundreds of lit reefers. "Smoking pot," said Adam Brook, the first speaker at the microphone, "is not what this rally is all about. It's about education -- the whole range of education." Not everyone cared about what the speakers had to say. Many stu- dents came simply to hang out. "We just came for the atmosphere and to visit our friends," said Scott Sniderman, a first-year student from Indiana University. Sniderman was among hundreds of students from other schools who made the pot pilgrimage to see friends at the University. Organizers of the event, including the newly formed University chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML), had other goals in mind. They distributed 30,000 petitions through the crowd for a state constitu- tional amendment to legalize mari- juana that would appear on the Nov. 8 ballot. See BASH, Page 3 Crickets take South Quad by storm in April Fool's prank By APRIL WOOD DAILY STAFF REPORTER Faster than a speeding Nite Owl, more annoying than a late-night fire alarm and able to leap under doors in a single bound. Crickets. Residents of the seventh floor of South Quad Were awakened by the presence of the unexpected little visitors near 4 a.m. Friday. Hundreds - maybe thousands - of crick- ets. The April Fool's Day prank has caused significant distress throughout the floor since he insects hide in cluttered areas and can remain unnoticed for days. Residents are still fending off the critters in their rooms and bathrooms. "They were everywhere. Every time we thought we got them, there were more," LSA first-year student Lidia Szabo said. One resident of the 600 hallway, which was the primarily affected area on the floor, said he saw four men at one end of the hall as he was entering the other end. Three of the men ran to another hall when he walked in, but one stayed and dumped more crickets onto the floor before disappearing. Residents of the hall chalked up the inci- dent to an April 1 prank, but some were not impressed by the trick. "I'm hoping it was just an April Fool's joke," said LSA sophomore Mary Coles. "I hate bugs, so I just sat up in my loft." "I thought it was a good April Fool's joke, as compared to pulling a fire alarm," said LSA first-year student Marie Belanger, a resident of an adjacent hallway. Another resident said the incident both- ered him. "I didn't think it was funny at all," said LSA first-year student Jeff Fixler, a resident of the targeted hallway. Building facilities staff and residence hall security responded promptly - within 15 minutes of reports of the incident. Extermina- tors were notified and arrived quickly to as- sess the situation. "It was taken care of very quickly and very efficiently," said Huber house Resident Di- rector Nicole Laughlin. The majority of the crickets were removed Friday morning, but many found places to hide and continued to pester residents through the weekend. Traps were laid out in the hallway and rooms to catch any insects that escaped the initial removal, although it will take a consid- erable amount of time before the hall is com- pletely cleared of the crickets. "I think there's a lot of them under my roommate's bed," LSA junior John Burton said . Ethem Palaj, resident advisor for the 600 and 700 hallways, said pranks like this one disturb residents and also cost the University money in exterminator fees . That morning, friends of Palaj were watch- ing a movie while he was asleep. After think- ing nothing of hearing voices in the hall, Palaj's friends saw little things marching in from under the door. Upon opening the door and seeing the bug jamboree, they called residence hall security. Palaj said he thought the prank was inap- propriate. "It's just sad because if that was meant to be a joke it was done in poor taste," Palaj said. "At the time it seemed fine, but if the crickets weren't caught so quickly it could have caused damage." MSA lobbies city for improved A DIAG PRAYER lighting al( By JAMES M. NASH DAILY STAFF REPORTER Members of the Michigan Student Assembly are lobbying the City Coun- cil for better lighting along Washtenaw Avenue, but an upgrade is months away unless the University agrees to bear much of the costs. The student government's liaison to the city, LSA Rep. Andrew Wright, &as asked the council to pledge to hire an independent engineer to assess lighting along Washtenaw Avenue. The thoroughfare is frequently traveled by students. It also is the site of numerous sexual assaults and other crimes, which MSA members at- tribute in part to the lack of lighting. The assembly dropped its earlier request for the city to replace the existing orange mercury lights with white lights and add new ones. In a March 14 letter to council members, Wright called that proposal "prema- ong Washtenaw Ave. ture" and suggested instead that the city hire an outside consultant. University and city officials met last week to discuss funding options for better lighting. Mayor Ingrid B. Sheldon called the discussion "very open and encouraging." But she and others acknowledged that no agreement is at hand. While the city is ultimately re- sponsible for off-campus lighting, council members and Wright have suggested that the University help defray the costs of new street lights. The University isn't saying no, but a spokesperson said the issue of fund- ing has not been addressed in detail. "All the discussions we've had have been very preliminary," said Lisa Baker, the University's director of public affairs. "It's too early to say what kind of arrangement, if any, we will work out." The issue of off-campus lighting first surfaced in 1986-87, when the Campuswide Security Task Force rec- ommended additional lighting. "The University has been trying to address issues from that report," Sheldon said, "but the wheels of gov- ernment sometimes turn very slowly." University officials have been re- ceptive to the city's request for fund- ing, Sheldon said. The mayor added that the city may seek a subsidy from Detroit Edison, the city's principal electrical utility. City officials have not estimated the cost of a lighting upgrade. Wright said he is pushing the issue now because city staff are outlining their budget priorities for next year. "The safety and security of all citizens in the community must out- weigh other budgetary concerns," he told the council. "Also, the assembly in no way expects the city to bear the majority of this cost." Serbs deny EVAN t IMiW8ly Engineering junior Spur Sulzby and Ann Arbor resident David Hagen participate in a Good Friday rally on the Diag. reports of terror; fighting continues _m