States vote on pot, affirmative action NATION/WORLD The Michigan Daily - Thursday, November 7, 1996 - 7A The Associated Press California turned its back ,n affirma- tive action. Florida rejected a sugar tax clean up the Everglades. And pot ' okers puffed celebratory joints in California and Arizona after marijuana was legalized for medical purposes. Across the nation Tuesday, voters decided on ballot measures ranging from securities fraud to logging and leg traps - all of them hot-button issues in their states. Win or lose, they tend to pave the way for future legisla- tion, and national change. . California's Proposition 209, which kns racial and sex preferences in pub- lic hiring, contracting and education, was widely considered the most divi- sive - and one of significant ballot battles around the country. Both sides invoked the spirit and speeches of the civil rights movement of the 1960s, framing the debate as a vote on the future of discrimination and affirmative action around the country. Supporters argued for a colorblind *ciety, while opponents said the move would derail programs that counter racism and sexism. The final say will likely shape affir- tmlative action programs nationally - and will probably be decided, not by vot- ers, but in the courts. Both sides yester- day filed lawsuits over the measure - proponents to get it into effect, oppo- nents to get rid of it as unconstitutional. "No matter what happens, this is only the beginning of what we believe will be a nationwide battle," said Kathy Spillar, a leader of Stop Prop 209. Casinos and other gambling proposals lost out in Ohio, Arkansas, Colorado, Nebraska and Washington. But in Michigan, bolstered by strong support from Detroit Mayor Dennis Archer, vot- ers agreed to three casinos in that city. Louisiana voters were less sure. Given a unique opportunity to kick out an industry that has riddled the state with scandal, they split their decision in parish-by-parish votes. Six parishes with riverboat casinos voted to keep them, 23 decided to allow it and 14 voted to keep them out; 30 parishes held on to video poker and 34 rejected it. The nation's views on hunting were just as jumbled. Massachusetts and Washington banned the use of dogs and bait to hunt bears while Michigan and Idaho rejected such restrictions. Oregon refused to repeal a 1994 ban on similar practices while Colorado banned leg hold traps and Alaska banned tracking wolves from airplanes. Environmental battles also attracted big money. In Florida, $23 million in advertising by sugar companies and farmers helped persuade voters to reject a penny-a-pound sugar tax for Everglades cleanup. Fertilizer runoff has polluted the fabled "River of Grass," but the voters refused an effort to make farmers pay almost half the enormous costs of restoring the wetland. , a EYE EXAMS AND EYE GLASSES I. AP PHOTO Edmund Wong, a Junior at the University of California at Berkeley, shouts his disap- proval of Proposition 209 during a march with other Berkeley students yesterday in Berkeley, Calif. VROTEST Continued from Page 1A Daily was stolen from the racks. Left behind were signs accusing the Daily of racism. The Washtenaw County Prosecutor's office refused to press charges, saying that Michigan larceny statutes do not make it a crime to steal a free-drop publication. Coleman said he estimates the recent efts will cost The Daily Californian more than $15,000, which includes the BAKER Continued from Page 1A irrelevant when making decisions affecting the University. "1 cannot think of any issue in four years where we had a split among parti- tan lines" said Regent Rebecca .cGowan (D-Ann Arbor). "I think what people do when they're elected is they move from being partisan. Their cost of advertising and an additional 4,000 papers that were printed and dis- tributed Tuesday afternoon. Campus police have classified the incident as grand theft, Coleman said, but city police are considering it to be theft. Both campus and city police are cur- rently investigating the case. "It's a free paper, but only free in limited quantities," Coleman said. "I don't think 22,000 is a limited quanti- ty." Coleman said The Daily Californian intends to prosecute the case. Coleman said The Daily Californian has not yet contacted an attorney and plans to present their case to the city after "gathering more information." Coleman said the issue was not just monetary and that it "involved some issues of free speech." "I'd like to know how those people (protesters) would feel if I turned off their microphone," Coleman said. "That's kind of what happened to us. I find it almost ironic that they did this. It's like saying you can have free speech if you say what we want." Yvonne Choong, a student govern- ment official at Berkeley, said she didn't see a lot of student support for the theft. "If we're going to support free speech, we're going to have to support it all," Choong said. "I don't think their ability to spread information should be obstructed at all." ftH THE BEST PLACES SPRING BREAK TO GO FOR Round Trip from Detroit DENVER March 1-8, 1997 from AIR ONLY $.3990 Copper Mountain Resort 8799 6 )99990(4 people) Lif I~kfsinclud ed! FLORIDA froml890 NONSTOP Tampa Bay Mar. 2-S St. Pete Mar. 1-8 F.t Myers Mar. 1-8 Orlando Mar. 1-8 ARUBA March 1-8, 1997 Mill Resort-1st Class, Across fm beach ACAPULCO March 2-9, 1997 I Quad Occ. Tl . Occ. Dbi. 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