EARW atlg WA~a+ n Tvv PI rs Today: Partly cloudy. High 54. Low 33. Tomorrow: Showers. High 65. One hundred eight yeasof editoria/freedom Monday Apr ,199 n g g M Nearly 5,000 gather for 27th Hash Bash Smokers, preachers attracted By Amy Barber DAly Staff Reporter tarrying fliers, bongs full of mari- juana and signs reading "HEMP: Help Educate More People," "Relegalize Marijuana" and "Save The Trees - Plant Hemp," participants in the 27th Hash Bash smoked pot freely and protested hemp's illegal status Saturday on the Diag. The annual festival brought about 5,000 people to the center of campus "high noon." A number of speakers inspired the crowd, including Tommy Chong of the infamous weed-smoking, movie-mak- ing duo Cheech and Chong. "I'm so stoned I don't know what to say," Chong _ said. But he had plenty to say. "If the important people were stoned, there'd be less violence in the world," Chong said. Chong denied the potentially nega- tive consequences of smoking mari- juana, saying he has been smoking nearly all of his life and at 60-years- old he can still "get it up," referring to theories about the effects of marijuana on the body. Another crowd favorite was Steve Hager, the editor in chief of High Times Magazine. "High Times officially declared that Ann Arbor is the coolest place in the universe," Hager said. Like Hager, many Hash Bashers See HASH BASH, Page 9A A2 police report fewer offenses fy Avam S. Turkel Daily Staff Reporter Despite a recent push in the Michigan state government to strengthen marijuana laws in Ann Arbor - thought to culti- vate illegal drug use throughout the state - none of the city's law enforcement agencies reported any major criminal viola- tions this weekend at the 27th annual Hash Bash on the Diag. Neither Ann Arbor Police Department officials nor Department of Public Safety officials reported disruptions in connection to a protest against marijuana laws. The partici- See VIOLATIONS, Page 2A SAAICHNCKr. /Dail Participants in the 27th annual Hash Bash gather on the Diag on Saturday to rally for the legalization of marijuana. MSA court upholds I party motion By Jewel Gopwani Daily Staff Reporter All but one count against the Michigan Student Assembly Elections Board were dropped last night by the elections appellate court - still leaving the a slim possibly of ousting newly elected Blue Party executive candidates on the table. The assembly's Central Student Judiciary decided to uphold e of six motions the Students' Party filed during the elec- tions process, claiming the elections board violated its own policies by not giving members of the Blue Party demerits for what it says are violations. But CSJ did agreed with the Students' Party on one count: An event the Blue Party held as a student government event was really a campaign event. This violated an elections rules, CSJ determined. The Blue Party hosted the "Seeing Blue" event March 19 in the Michigan Union Ballroom. The elec- tions board already randomly assigned one member of the Blue Party a demerit for dis- tributing a survey with an MSA logo on it at the event. Now, CSJ has decided to assign random- ly another demerit - this one for the Blue Party's use of the LSA-SG logo on the sur- _________vey. If MSA President-elect Bram Elias or MSA Vice President-elect Andy Coulouris receive that demer- it, the duo could be removed from its new post because they will have exceeded the numbers of demerits allowed to MSA didates. "he demerit will be assigned randomly at Tuesday's MSA meeting. Neither Elias or Coulouris could be reached for comment early this morning. Disappointed by the ruling to uphold the decisions of the elections board, "I thought we posed strong arguments about legitimate issues about the election;" Students' Party spokesperson Brian Reich said. The Students' Party case consisted of six motions, most of which question the way the elections board assigned demerits to members of the Blue Party during weeks preceding and dur- the elections. e Students' Party's second motion involved the action the elections board took against the Blue Party when it placed an advertisement in The Michigan Daily on March 25 without indicating who paid for the ad. According to elections rules, all campaign propaganda must display who paid for campaign material. Those candidates who fail to do so receive a demerit from the elections board. For this incident, the board selected the demerit recipient by liter- ally picking the name of a Blue Party member out of a hat. But the Students' Party argued that because the ad listed the Ones of every Blue Party candidate, each candidate should receive a demerit. The Students' Party's third motion involved the same Daily advertisement. The party claims that every member of the Blue Party violated an election rule, which dictates that no cam- paigning can occur within 50 feet of a polling site. The Blue Party ad appeared in issues of the Daily that were placed the regular Angell Hall drop-site during the elections - less than 50 feet from two polling sites. The Students' Party's fourth motion involves an incident See MSA, Page 9A NATO to aid, airlift refugees BELGRADE, Yugoslavia (AP) - NATO warplanes and missiles attacked an army headquarters, oil refineries and other targets in and around Belgrade yesterday, while Yugoslav forces drove toward Kosovo's western mountains where ethnic Albanian guerrillas were preparing a last stand. Some refugees overwhelming neigh- boring regions were flown to European countries as relief agencies and Western nations struggled to help the more than 300,000 people forced out of Kosovo. Air raid sirens sounded last night in Belgrade, signaling the start of a 12th night of NATO strikes on Yugoslavia. The Tanjug state news agency reported anti-aircraft fire was heard in Novi Sad, the nation's second-largest city, fol- lowed by an explosion. The independent Beta news agency reported a powerful explosion in the Belgrade area around midnight and more than 20 explosions during a half- tour span around Pristina, the Kosovo capital. More explosions were reported in the eastern Kosovo town of Gnjilane. Hours later, NATO planes hit two suburbs of the capital - Rakovica to the south and Surcin to the northwest - the Belgrade crisis center said. Later, the official Tanjug news agency said NATO planes targeted an army barracks in the town of Raska, 100 miles south of Belgrade. No other details were given. With mounting reports of mass killings and other atrocities in a cam- paign by Serb forces to rid Kosovo of ethnic Albanians, NATO officials again blamed poor weather for limiting air attacks. But clearing skies over Belgrade and other parts of northern Serbia - the main republic in Yugoslavia - allowed some strikes. The Yugoslav First Army headquar- ters in the capital, along with petroleum tanks, an ammunition plant and high- way bridges elsewhere, were hit, Air Commodore David Wilby said at NATO headquarters in Brussels. Pentagon spokesperson Kenneth Bacon said yesterday the United States was sending Apache helicopter gun- ships to Albania, adding to NATO's abil- ity to attack Serb troops and tanks. U.S. troops also will begin manning a newly deployed Multiple Launch Rocket System in Macedonia to fire short- and medium-range missiles into Yugoslavia, a senior U.S. official said. The system can operate in all types of weather. An estimated 2,000 troops will be sent to operate and maintain the heli- copters and missile launchers, Bacon said. The Yugoslav military has been shift- ing forces in Kosovo to the southwest, where the rebel Kosovo Liberation Army was regrouping for what appeared to be a last stand, Wilby said. "This is the last area where the (rebels) will be able to mount a serious resistance," Wilby said of the mountain- ous region near the Albanian border. The Tanjug state news agency said NATO attacks yesterday afternoon hit unspecified targets near Klina, 27 miles west of Pristina, Kosovo's capital, and Gnjilane, 22 miles to the southeast. It also said NATO raids damaged a 400- year-old bridge in the southwest Kosovo city of Djakovica. It also reported NATO missiles hit an oil refinery at Pancevo, northeast of Belgrade, killing two workers and injur- ing four, while a 73-year-old woman died and seven people were injured in an attack on Cacak, an industrial town 50 miles south of the capital. Three people were injured when a fuel depot near the town of Kraljevo, some 75 miles south of Belgrade, was also hit, Yugoslav news reports said. In the capital's New Belgrade area, across the Sava River from the old city center, civil defense officials said a ther- mal heating plant was attacked Saturday night, along with the police academy in the Banjica suburb. Flames lit the clear, moonlit night with a huge orange glow. But Vladislav Jovanovic, the Yugoslav ambassador to the United Nations, said Belgrade remained defiant in the face of the NATO cam- paign. "It only increases our resolve in defending our country," he said on the television program "Fox News See KOSOVO, Page 5A JEREMY MENCHIK/Daily Associate Pastor Cecilio Ryna leads the congregation yesterday in a Easter Sunday mass at Saint Mary Student Parish located on the comer of William and Thompson streets. 'U' studen.Ots fin mor thia n egg nEaste By Callie Scott Daily Staff Reporter Cold and rainy conditions yesterday couldn't dampen the spirits of many University commu- nity members who enjoyed each other's compa- ny and celebrated the most important holiday of the Christian religion. Easter Sunday is a time when Christians remember the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. The holiday is central to the Christian faith, which holds the belief that the crucifixion, burial and subsequent resurrection of Jesus Christ allowed his believers to have eternal life. Like many holidays, Easter has come to sym- bolize many commercial items, such as the Easter bunny and colored eggs. But to some, the holiday means so much more, said Mikerra Bostic, a founding member of Worship Warriors, a Christian group new to campus this year. "It is about how you can really connect with other people and share the love of Christ;' Bostic said. Hundreds of students came together to do just that Friday afternoon at the Good Friday See EASTER, Page 5A *Da ily to assess affirmative action attitudes The Michigan Daily will conduct the first comprehensive survey of student opinions on affirmative action and admissions policies at the University. The survey, designed in conjunction with the Department of Communications Studies and the Institute for Social Research, will be a probabil- ity sample of 1,600 University students, selected at ran- Ut ndom from all currently enrolled University students. Students selected to take the survey will receive an e-mail with the subject heading, "Michigan Daily Student Survey." To ensure all University students are represented, a high level of participation is required. If you receive an e-mail with this subject line, please respond as soon as possible. The survey takes about 15 minutes to complete. The results of the survey will be reported in a series of articles in the Daily in the coming weeks. Supreme Court to hear student fee case By Kelly O'Connor Daily Staff Reporter In a case that could limit the impact of college and university activist groups, the Supreme Court agreed last Monday to decide whether students' ideology should factor into decisions about the funding of campus organizations. In April 1996, then University of Wisconsin law student Scott Southworth, along with two other law students, filed a suit against the school's board of regents. They alleged that the from student fees stopped completely. "It's a very purist opinion," he said. "We want them to say 'you can't give the fee to whoever to do whatever they wish with it."' The student government at the University of Wisconsin at Madison collects a fee of $166 per stu- dent each semester. About $15 of that money goes to stu- J__ _._... ...- ,--.. from the university, said he and the other plaintiffs identified themselves as conservative Christians, both politically and ideologically, and did not want their money going to student groups whose opinions they opposed. The three drafted a list of 18 organi- zations whose philosophies they object- ed to. It included the campus chapter of the National Organization of Women because of its pro-choice stance, a gay rights activism group and an environ- mental lobbying group whose members tic system under which the school is run. "According to Scott Southworth, stu- dents do not have the right to govern themselves" Quinn said. "I really dis- like having my student fees going to certain groups, but I respect the forum of open ideas.' Quinn said that restricting student council funding to only non-political or activist groups is not plausible because it rules out almost all student groups. "Anything you do has some kind of politic and ideology to it," she said. I