The Michigan Daily-Thursday, May 29, 1980-Page 3 Bookstore ordered closed BY MITCH STUART Opponents of an adult bookstore located on N. Fourth Ave. won a tem- porary injunction yesterday that bars the store from selling pornographic literature. Washtenaw County Circuit Court Judge Henry Conlin handed down the injunction yesterday after a three-week delay that had some local merchants fuming. MEMBERS OF the ad hoc North Fourth Avenue Coalition have been trying to shut down the Danish News Co. since early April. Bookstore spokesmen have admitted their store violates a city zoning or- dinance, but say they intend to challenge the constitutionality of the ordinance. Yesterday's temporary injunction was intended to keep the bookstore closed while that issue is decided in court, and a permanent injunction is sought. But yesterday' afternoon the store was still open and selling por- nographic material. BOOKSTORE spokesmen said they intended to comply with the judge's or- der by removing all the "offensive" material in the store, but as of 5 p.m., the walls were still lined with adult magazines and sexual paraphernalia and showcases were still filled with X- rated movies. City Attorney Bruce Laidlaw said he will send his chief enforcement officer to the bookstore today to check com- pliance with the court's order. If the store is still operating, Laidlaw said, he will seek a contempt citation from the court. That citation should be obtained the same day, he said. The city attorney's powers of enfor- cement do not include padlocking the store - that would take a contempt citation, which could also result in the jailing of the store's owners. Although bookstore spokesmen say the city zoning ordinance violates their first amendment rights, some com- munity members disagree. "I don't see it as a first amendment issue. It's a zoning issue," said Amy Coha, Women's Crisis Center manager. The Crisis Center is located directly above the bookstore. "I think it's really dangerous to take as sacred a right as free speech and use it to further one's economic status," said Mary Franklin, a worker at Bread and Roses, affiliated with the Crisis Center. Laidlaw said he may have to seek an amendment to the injunction to ban pornographic films as well as printed matter, since films were not singled out in yesterday's injunction. Council passes budget; slashes property taxes 15 per cent By ELAINE RIDEOUT Ann Arbor City Council last night unanimously passed a $44.3 million 1980-81 budget which will provide nearly a 15 per cent reduction in property taxbillsfor residents: Incorporated in the budget is a 2.2 milltax cut. "ACCORDING TO my figures," said Councilwoman Leslie Morris (D- Second Ward), "the budget represents a net reduction of $517,800 from the city administrator's proposed budget of April 14." But Morris chided council for taking credit for reducing taxes where no credit is due. Because voters didn't get the shredder they voted for, she said, the city has to give back money raised for it. ieather than directly refunding the surplus money that was collected, the city will roll back taxes to in part com- pensate taxpayers for the services paid for but not received, Morris explained. COUNCIL MADE reductions in the city administrator's budget which in- cluded an $80,000 deletion of a fire truck and $27,000 cut in overtime pay in the police department. According to City Administrator Terry Sprenkel, the fire department cut would "push back the acquisition of a replacement truck one year." Mayor Louis Belcher suggested that further cuts "in police overtime are possible for the future. We'd like to get the University to pay part of the overtime during football weekends," he said. In other areas, council eliminated funding for a new technician position in the combined Personnel/Human Rights Department, repairs to the city hall promenade deck, and deleted all fun- ding of the Veterans Cooling tower. Despite unified Democrataic op- position, council also approved reducing the budget's contingency allowance to $25,000-down $75,000 from the administrator's $100,000 recommendation. Belcher recommen- ded that any unexpected surpluses the city comes up with in the future should be moved intothe contingency fund before being allocated to a specific area. The emergency warning system allocation was reduced by 50 per cent, pushing forward by another year com- pletion of the system. Council agreed unanimously to in- crease fees and rentals at Veteran's ice areana, thereby reducing city subsidy. Taxpayers will also begin paying more for building permits, housing inspec- tions, and street repairs. "Repairs are not paying for themselves," Sprenkel said. Initial costa of building permits will not change, he explained, because as the cost of construction goes up, the cost of building permits goes up also. Council approved two expenditure in- cresesttotaling $16,500 which restore half the money funding the city historian and and information'side position in the City Administrator's of- f . Daily Photo by DAVID HARRIS DEMONSTRATORS AT YESTERDAY'S "peace vigil" sponsored by the Washtenaw Committee Against Registration and the Draft and the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan march in front of the Federal Buidling downtown. Peacevig.i staged against registration By SUE INGLIS and BONNIE JURAN - More than 100 passersby stopped throughout the day yesterday to par- ticipate in a "peace vigil" sponsored by the Washtenaw Committee Against Registration and the Draft and the Public Interest Research Group in Michigan. The vigil, organized in response to the upcoming Senate debate on draft registration, is to end this evening. AT NOON yesterday, nearly 20 people picketed in front of the Federal Building downtown. Following that demonstration, a number of speakers voiced their opposition to the registration bill. Ann Arbor City Councilman Ken Lat- ta said the government justifies the draft by saying it will give people "an equal chance to go (to war)." But, Lat- ta continued, any draft process is "inherently flawed" because it places a "disproportionate burden on the poor." Ann Arbor School Board member John Powell, noting the military ap- peals to young people by assuring them they will visit exotic places if they enlist, suggest "visiting exotic places such as the ghetto" to see how money being poured into military budgets could be used to provide jobs for the poor. LATER YESTERDAY afternoon during a second group of scheduled speeches, mathematics Prof. Art Sch- wartz told an audience of about 45 people that "we must do everything we possibly can to stop this senseless mar- ch into World War III." Schwartz added See REGISTRATION, Page 6