michigandaily.com Ann Arbor, Michigan Monday, April 6, 2015 CELEBRATING OUR ONE-HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIFTH YEAR OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Harbaugh’s Michigan Stadium debut was a defensive affair » INSIDE Spring Game Initiative aims to increase minority enrollment amid calls for change By ALLANA AKHTAR and CARLY NOAH Daily Staff Reporters The University will host 46 high school freshmen and sophomores from Kalamazoo Public Schools for a three-day residential pro- gram designed to spur increased application and enrollment num- bers for underrepresented minori- ties on campus. The purpose of the program is to expose younger high school students to the University in a way that will encourage them to aspire to attend. Students must have at least a 3.0 grade point average and submit a 300-word essay to gain acceptance into the program. The newly formed Michigan Institute for the Improvement of African American Representation — a committee connected with the University’s Black Student Union — will organize and run the pro- gram. Engineering junior Will Roys- ter, who helped launch MIIAAR and is the BSU Academic Concerns Committee chair, said the idea stemmed from interest in expand- ing minority representation on campus. He said many of the pro- grams offered for minorities at the University don’t provide partici- pants with the full college experi- ence. “Most of the other programs don’t let students allow themselves to visualize themselves as students on campus,” Royster said. Among the activities planned are opportunities for participants to meet with various student orga- nizations, take a campus tour, view a presentation from an admissions counselor, participate in an SAT workshop and hear from Univer- sity alum Shawn Blanchard, who teaches mathematics for the Uni- versity’s Summer Bridge Program, a pre-freshman year academic preparation program. While this is the immersion program’s pilot year, Royster said he hopes to increase participation from other underrepresented high schools in the state, such as dis- ‘Hash Bash’ promotes ballot measure legalizing cannabis and hemp use By ISOBEL FUTTER and SAMIHA MATIN Daily Staff Reporters Marijuana smoke, along with screams of, “Free the weed, end the war,” filled the air Saturday as the 44th annual Hash Bash unfolded on the Diag and Mon- roe Street. The event lit up at “high noon.” Speakers included State Rep. Jeff Irwin (D–Ann Arbor), Lan- sing Mayor Virg Bernero, City Councilmember Sabra Briere (D—Ward 1) and acclaimed comedian and activist Tommy Chong. Since its inception, Hash Bash has been an outlet for advocates of marijuana decriminalization. This held true Saturday. Charlie Strachbein, who coordinates the accompanying Monroe Street Fair, estimated that 9,000 people were in attendance. One of these attendees was the event’s origi- nator: John Sinclair. The first Hash Bash was held in 1972 as a response to the 1969 arrest of activist and poet John Sinclair, who gave two marijua- na joints to an undercover offi- cer. Sinclair was sentenced to 10 years in prison, which sparked the “John Sinclair Freedom Rally” in December 1971. Held in the University’s Crisler Arena, the event featured a host of celebrities, including John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Stevie Wonder and Allen Ginsberg who came to protest for Sinclair’s release. The Michigan Supreme Court eventually overturned the law under which Sinclair had been convicted, and by the fol- lowing April, the first Hash Bash was underway. “I started this and I’m still alive, so I like to come back,” Sin- clair said. “This was all a little idea me and some other people had 44 years ago … One day, I’ll be here and we’ll be celebrating legalization in Michigan.” A large emphasis at this year’s Hash Bash was promoting a 2016 state ballot measure that would legalize cannabis and hemp use in Michigan. It also aims to remove past criminal convic- tions for the possession of mari- juana. In Ann Arbor, marijuana pos- session is a civil infraction — offenders can incur a $25 fine. CONNOR BADE/Daily LEFT: Connor Morrell juggles during the 44th annual Hash Bash Saturday afternoon. UPPER RIGHT: Guitarist Laith Al-Saadi performs the Star Spangled Banner at Hash Bash on the Diag. LOWER RIGHT: A crowd gathers on the Diag with a large ‘Legalize 2016’ banner, handmade signs and flags. Diag festivities feature student organizations, tap water tasting By ANASTASSIOS ADAMOPOULOS and JACQUELINE CHARNIGA Daily Staff Reporters Though Earth Day is celebrated nationally on April 22, University celebrations came weeks early this year to accommodate potential conflict with final exams. Central Student Government’s Commission on University Sus- tainability, the Student Sustain- ability Initiative and University Dining co-hosted the festivities, in partnership with more than 20 campus groups Friday. The event drew in both University students and local attendees, with activities underway on both the Diag and in Palmer Commons. On the Diag, activities included sustainability-themed games, moss graffiti and a “take-the-tap- water taste test,” in which students were asked to taste test unlabeled containers of bottled and tap water and guess which was which. Students selected Knute Nadel- hoffer, professor of ecology and evolutionary biology and direc- tor of the University’s Biological Station, to address attendees and explain the significance of Earth Day. He spoke from the steps of Hatcher Graduate Library to the crowd. Nadelhoffer spoke to the inten- tions of Gaylord Nelson, the former Wisconsin senator who founded the day in 1970, whose wish was to raise awareness about a multitude of environmental issues, including pollution and the impact of over- population on the environment. “Back then, we had no idea about fossil fuels and burning for- ests,” Nadelhoffer said. LSA senior Angela Yang, the CSG Commission on University Sustainability chair and SSI board ‘U’ to host high school program for 46 students ACADEMICS For 44th year, marijuana advocates assemble in A2 SUSTAINABILITY ‘U’ celebrates environment on early Earth Day GRANT HARDY/Daily The Michigan Raas Team performs in “That Brown Show” at the Power Center on Friday evening. South Asian groups dance in fifth ‘That Brown Show’ Several ensembles perform during event headed by Michigan Sahana By TANYA MADHANI Daily Staff Reporter Several of the University’s South Asian student perfor- mance groups gathered at the Power Center on Saturday night to perform in the fifth annual “That Brown Show.” Michigan Sahana, a student group composed of Indian clas- sical dancers and musicians, organizes and hosts TBS every year. Engineering sophomore Sandeep Siva, Michigan Sahana vice president and TBS Com- mittee chair, said the event was created to showcase South Asian arts to University students and local residents. Siva said the founders of the event titled the event “That Brown Show” to connect across a variety of groups across campus. More than 800 students, alumni from the performing groups, family members of par- ticipants and Ann Arbor resi- dents attended Saturday’s event. The most challenging part of the show, Siva said, was preserv- ing the original idea and identity Detroit-based company plans to launch new stores across the country By LINDSEY SCULLEN Daily Staff Reporter In the time it takes a watch’s hour hand to complete about 1080 full cycles, a new store will pop up in Ann Arbor selling a product to measure just that. By mid-May, a store selling Shi- nola products — an up-and-com- ing brand known primarily for its watches — will open on South Main and East Liberty streets. The new store in Ann Arbor will be the first of eight to 10 addi- tional store openings slated for Detroit-based Shinola this year, adding to the store’s six exist- ing locations. Washington D.C., Miami, San Francisco, Palo Alto, Los Angeles, Dallas, Austin, New York and London are among other Shinola to open Ann Arbor location See SHINOLA, Page 3A See SHOW, Page 3A See EARTH, Page 3A See PROGRAM, Page 3A See HASH BASH, Page 3A BUSINESS INDEX Vol. CXXIV, No. 96 ©2015 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com NEWS......................... 2A OPINION.....................4A ARTS...........................5A SUDOKU..................... 2A CL ASSIFIEDS...............6A SPORTS MONDAY.........1B NEW ON MICHIGANDAILY.COM THE FILTER: Canada Goose controversy MICHIGANDAILY.COM/BLOGS GOT A NEWS TIP? Call 734-418-4115 or e-mail news@michigandaily.com and let us know. WEATHER TOMORROW HI: 52 LO: 37