Source: Ann Arbor News Author: Marianne Rzepka, News Staff Reporter Pubdate: 26 Mar 1998 Contact: Editorial Page Editor: Judy McGovern 340 E. Huron St. P.O. Box 1147 Ann Arbor, Mi. 48106 Website: http://www.aa.mlive.com/news/ Editors Note: Couldn't find proof on the website that they accepted email LTEs, but it is worth a try. If anyone is going to be at the Hash Bash, I will be the big guy in the DrugSense t. This is, I believe, the longest running annual protest of its kind in the world (27th this year, I think). Their website follows - Richard http://www.hashbash.com/ WEARING RED RIBBON SAYS 'NO' TO HASH BASH A local group wants to take an anti-drug stand and is asking everyone who is against Ann Arbor's annual Hash Bash to wear a red ribbon the week before the April 5 event. "I've used the red ribbons for the Drug-Free Youth celebration" a statewide anti-substance abuse program that ran at the end of October, said Richie Coleman, who heads the marketing and membership committee for Washtenaw Community Partnership and is public safety community coordinator for the Pittsfield Township Department of Public Safety. "This time, let's bring the ribbons back out to send another message." Last year, about 5,000 people showed up on the University of Michigan Diag for the Hash Bash, and police arrested about 65 people for smoking marijuana. The partnership, funded with a five-year, $300,000 federal grant, brings together schools, churches, community organizations and individuals who want to do something to improve the community, Coleman said. Besides the red ribbon campaign for the Hash Bash, Community Partnership will continue to work on educating the public about drugs and their effects, as well as collecting information on community resources. And, in a year or so, the group might be able to organize an alternative to the Hash Bash, Coleman said. As an example, he said, the New Year's Jubilee in Ypsilanti every year provides alcohol-free activities for people of all ages on New Year's Eve. "Perhaps we should have another New Year Jubilee at another time of the year," Coleman said, "like at the same time as the Hash Bash." Judy Burke, who knows Coleman through her neighborhood watch program, suggested the idea of wearing the red ribbons and for an alternative activity for teens during Hash Bash. "It should be a place kids could go dance and not worry about drugs or alcohol," said Burke, who has two children, ages 12 and 13. "These kids need to get off the streets." The partnership, together with the Pittsfield Township police department, on Tuesday sponsored a panel discussion dealing with drugs in the community. The half-hour presentation, "Taking a Stand," was broadcast on the local television station CTN along with a two-hour discussion, "Say It Straight - Our Health, Our Youth and Marijuana," which was broadcast live from the Kellogg Center in East Lansing. That broadcast dealt with the medical, social and political implications related to the recent legalization of marijuana for medical use in some states. Speaking during the "Taking a Stand" program, Ann Arbor Mayor Ingrid Sheldon said the Hash Bash tarnishes the city's reputation. "Ann Arbor does have the perception of being a joke in terms of not caring what happens (with the Hash Bash)," she said. "It is important that we step up to the plate and say no."