Pubdate: Wed, 08 Apr 2009
Source: Red and Black, The (U of Georgia, GA Edu)
Copyright: 2009 The Red and Black Publishing Co., Inc.
Contact:  http://www.redandblack.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2800
Author: Carey O'Neil
Cited: National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws http://norml.org/

NORML OFFICIAL CONTESTS UGA STANCE ON BULLDOG LOGO

The University said in a hearing Tuesday that UGA's chapter of the 
National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws violated 
University copyright with a logo, but NORML's president said the logo 
was protected as intellectual property.

The logo in question, a cartoon bulldog smoking while studying 
underneath an arch, appeared on 50 shirts and NORML's Web site.

Megan Janasiewicz, program adviser of the Center for Student 
Organizations, said student organizations must receive approval to 
use the University's copyright.

"It's a quick process. It's easy to do, but it's essential," she said.

Janasiewicz said after Legal Affairs notified her of the problem, she 
sent e-mails to the student officers, asking them to return unsold 
shirts and remove the image from their Web site by the following evening.

"We had no communication from [NORML] during that time, no e-mail, no 
phone call," she said. Janasiewicz said she was surprised after 
Wojciech Kaczkowski - a junior from Krakow, Poland, and NORML's 
president - told her at the hearing that he had responded to her 
e-mail before the deadline.

Ed Mirecki, director of student activities and organizations, said at 
the hearing that he extended NORML's deadline when he found out its 
Web site developer was out of town.

"There were two opportunities for the group to take action," he said, 
but when the logo was still on the Web site at the deadline, Legal 
Affairs was notified and Enterprise Information and Technology 
Services was asked to block the site.

Kaczkowski said NORML was never informed of the deadline extension, 
and he had made every attempt to communicate with the proper 
authorities. He argued the drawing was the intellectual property of 
Greg Stone, the artist who created it.

"If you prosecute us over this image, it would be like prosecuting 
Andy Warhol for his painting of Campbell's Soup," he said.

Stone said at the hearing that he didn't look at University images as 
inspiration for drawing.

"For my primary model for my version of the bulldog I used a Looney 
Toons version," he said.

Kaczkowski said anyone who saw the drawing would immediately 
recognize it as a parody or satire. He said his group was being 
unfairly targeted.

The hearing ended Tuesday evening without resolution and will 
reconvene next Thursday.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom