Thursday, September 4, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Three Thursday, September 4, 1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Marijuana-easy, loose in Ann Arbor By PAUL HASKINS First-time visitors to Ann Arbor and those parental types who haven't drop- ped in since Jonas Salk made headlines in the University's Rackham Build- ing tend to go weak-kneed and slack- jawed when first exposed to a covey of cannibis - consumers jauntily par- taking in their favorite pastime. If you look closely you can see the culture shock spreading its verdant tones over their middling-American, silently ma- joritive faces. "Good Lord Henry," Martha blurts. "I think that boy over there by the police car is smoking a marijuana ciga- rette." THE words trail off, and the new- comers stand transfixed, waiting for the authorities or religion or some- CBM: By BILL TURQUE Pub While many will argue that at th radio had its best years when shows F.D.R. was in the White House Talkb. and the Dodgers were in Brook- phone- lyn, it is alive and quite well which at the University. Manning the featur airwaves 24-hours-a-day, 7-days- thing. a-week from the cavernous OJE depths of the Student Activities covers Building basement, the Cam- statio pus Broadcasting Network (CB- operat N) operates a pair of stations the "r endeavoring to satisfy even the wire s most eccentric of auxal tastes. depart The two stations, WCBN (89.5- revam FM) and WRCN (650-AM) serve phasis the dual purpose of educating C and training students in broad- CB casting skills and providing an counte alternative to the relentlessly enly 1 commercial, jingle-ridden fare ti cl which dominates most area ra- the U dio stations. Cable thing to purge the offenders of their disdainful habit. But the strong arm of the law is nowhere to be seen, and the Lord seems to want no part of it either. Professorial sorts amble past the tokers without tweaking a nostril.- The newcomers self-consciously take it all in. Dissonance mounts within them and finally yields to a profound realiz- ation spring from some dark mental crevice: "The don't call Ann Arbor the Dope Capital of America for noth- ing." Though certainly by no means the drug cultist's answer to Valhalla, Ann Arbor is just about as close as you can come to it in the continental U.S. Drug busts do go down on a daily basis, county and city lawmen devote an in- timidating chunk of their budgets to narcotics control, and career-minded Music drug trafficers take pains to speak in guarded tones, avoid transactions in public places. - But for the casual fancier of grass and hash, toking privileges in Ann Ar- bor are virtually unrestricted. Though nobody ever accused the landed gentry of Washtenaw County of being socially enlightened, the University population has traditionally injected community norms with a progressive bent far ex- ceeding that of mainstream America. BY THE mid-60s marijuana use was an accepted and still growing (if not universal and officially condoned) fea- ture of student lifestyles. By 1970, students could smoke dope in the dorms with little fear of harass- ment, and they inhaled their new- found freedom for all it was worth. These were also boom times for LSD and other hallucinogens, which lent a colorful air to the campus setting never before dreamed possible. Every dorm had its own Big Dealer, in which it took no small pride, and rival dormers at a loss for conversa- tion could always break the ice by dis- cissing the quality and price (whole- sale and retail) of the latest shipment of dope to hit their respective domo- ciles. The Zig-Zag Man had never had it so good, and drugs of every variety could be had on short notice. At one point in the Fall of 1971, it was ru- mored that the Mosher-Jordan snack bar, Dirty Dick's, was throwing in a complimentary hit of window-pane acid with every eight-ounce serving of grape drink. Beyond the law but ever vulnerable to shifts in social winds, tastes in chem- See MARIJUANA, Page 9 tas tes. for all lic Affairs programming Ojeda said RCN will probab- e station includes such ly start playing a wider range as the Women's Tour, of commercial music, while not ack, a weekly half-hour completely abandoning their -in show, and Snapshot, gold format. offers five minute mini- es on anything and every- RCN ALSO brings in about $7000 a year in advertising reve- nue, an important function be- ae "a eakpBnt' atw cause CBN, due to its license as n right now. He said the an educational station, is not tion has degenerated into permitted to advertise. CBN rip and read" reliance on may have a more dynamic pro- service copy. He added the gramming concept, but RCN evine copy.Headdedhin r ,helps to pay the bills. Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS A DOPE SMOKER tokes down with a bong, a pipe that deals a real wallop. It is considered to be one of the most efficient ways to get stoned, as any dope smoker will attest to. GOT A PAIN? Health Service: Potentally dangerous o Vour health By PAUL HASKINS more, and I just was irascible Limping gamely (how else?) enough to oblige him. toward the Dial-A-Ride van I began wondering what it was FINALLY,we make it to my ankle had against me. Health Service, and I gingerly Had I ever left it behind in stumbled out of the glorified favor of some sturdier, better flower truck. turned ankle? Nover. Was I the Once inside, things seemedI type that would heap verbal to pick up as the two recep-1 abuse on it every time it gave tionists quickly processed me,, me a bum steer? Heck no. gave me my file, stamped my Could I be so uncaring a cur I. D. card, and sent me behind as to smother it in a hot wool the yellow door into the medical sock and high-top All-Stars clinic. The nurse at the desk po- when all the other ankles were litely processed me, took my out sunning themselves in the file, stamped my I.' D. card summer breeze? Uh-uh. and asked me to sit down. I didn't bother askying whyE THEN why the hell did it the temperature in Health Ser- have to get sprained every time vice is never under 120 degrees. I came within fifty yards of a I would have said something but basketball court? The damn I wanted to conserve my breath.a thing's just no good, that's why. Maybe they find unconsciousj I doesn't know just how soft it patients easier to deal with. a ton and could have used a shave. But she had a great personality. "Okay," she chirp- ed, "We're going to sit on the table and lie real still and then I'll take a couple of pictures and we'll be alldone." Sounds harmlessenough, I! reckoned. I lay on the table and watched down my nose in terror as she put my heel where my toes used to be. "Tell me if it' hurts," she advised. "Argh, off!" I compiled. "That's good," she said smil-1 ing sweetly. It was over in a few minutes. She hauled me off the table and left me leaning on a wall,dwhile she punched my I. D. card onto threeorfour forms. THEN she sent me back down See HEALTH, Page 7 "WE ARE programming tot the esoteric and progressive ast well as the familiar," said CBN General Manager Ross Ojeda. WCBN employs the "blockt programming" format, offering particular kinds of music at various hours of the day. This E ranges from light rock andl country in the morning, to more3 progressive rock in the after- noon. The sound shifts to rhythm and blues when the sun goes down, and jazz dominates after midnight. While there is no accurate es- timate of the station's listener- ship, Ojeda thinks "each block has its own substantial group of listeners." "You get people down here who really feel that they haveI something to offer, or some- thing to say. And then you get the people who want to do things so that they can say theyf did them."t But most CBN people agree that for anybody with thel slightest interest in radio, thet place is a goldmine. "PEOPLE don't realize what's of the public affairs staff. down here," said Jenny French, ONE programming concept t at CBN which both Ojeda and, Program Director Mark Lloyd hope to expand is referred to as "radiola." This is several con- secutive hours of special inter-t est shows, running the gamut musicallysfrom classical, to big band, folk, and "golden oldies." Radiola occurred on Sundays! last year, and the plan will ex- pand to Saturdays as well. t "We want to concentrate onc perfecting the existing format rather than changing it," said Lloyd. found upbea tion p "sixti But Ojeda mat ago," ket h hits o new a 'tment is currenty oeng iped, with more of an em-E on local news coverage. N's carrier current AM erpart, WRCN is appar- headed for more substan- hanges. Broadcasting into Jniversity dorms, and on channel 8, RCN was ed two years ago as an t, tightly formatted sta- playing almost exclusively es gold". times have changed, and calls the solid gold for- "a good one three years but adds the local mar- has been saturated with of years past and that a approach is needed. Housing in Ann Arbor: Dormitory life . .. By GLEN ALLERHAND Dormitory living-it's what many incoming students look forward to: anticipating the release from parental restraints, the chance to go it alone, and the opportunity to intermingle with others in the same situation. Whatever dorm Ife specifically means for the many students that exist in this milieu, it is certain that it serves as a primary introducton to the Unversty settng, offerng a variety of pain and pleasures. In the fall, carloads of portable families loaded down with luggage transport their college-bound sons and daughters to the dormitories which will swallow up its new residents as soon as all the goodbyes are said. Replete with memories of hell-raising orientation parties and new-found friends, this horde of students enters the resi- dence halls with an eager enthusiasm that helps soften the blow of sudden isolation. Rediscovering summer acquaintances and re-exploring local hangs, they live it up again for a few days. But frivolity cannot go on forever, andthedormitories take on a different atmosphere as the academic year begins. The University boasts 11 of what it calls "traditional resi- dence halls," to diferentiate them from its specialized all male or all female residences. The dorms are all coed, except for three exclusively female halls that have earned handy little sobriquets like "The Virgin Vaut." See 'U', Page 6 ... and off-campus By ANN MARIE LIPINSKI It's no secret that the Ann Arbor rental market is one of the most exorbitantly priced in the state. Furthermore. it's also common knowledge that many of the city's landlords are not the amiable, student-loving proprietors they would have you believe. Students in Ann Arbor are a captive audience, and many of the city's landlords exploit that advantage to the hilt. "WHERE ELSE are students going to go?" asks Irene Kievat, senior market analyst for the Michigan State Housing Development authority (MSHDA). "If you're a landlord, you can put four people in an apartment and charge $300 a month." The high cost of living and steep property taxes in Ann Arbor, coupled with a supply of off-campus student housing that doesn't approach the area's growing demand, are the primary reasons why renting in the city has become so painfully expen- sive, says Off-Campus Housing Director Peter Schoch. And until the supply increases, Schoch sees no respite from growing rental costs in sight. "Right now, vacancies in student housing areas is under three per cent," says Schoch, "which is a very unhealthy condition for the consumer. What we need more than anything else here are additional housing units." See GOOD, Page 6 Ojeda said one of the "hidden fruits" of CBN is its steady stream of graduates to local commercial stations such as WAAM, WPAG, WRIF, and ironically, the station which is now its chief competitor, WIQB. FM Program Director Lloyd emphasizes the quality of the two stations is limited only by the creative energies of the stu- dents working there, which num- bered over 270 during the past year. "There is always the oppor- tunity to learn," said Lloyd. "Being 24 hours a day, seven days a week, that's a lot of air- time to fill," he concluded. Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS DISC JOCKEY Michael Nastos is shown here kicking out the jams over the airwaves of WCBN-FM. The Campus Broadcasting Network, located in the basement of the Stu- dent Activities Building, operates 24 hours-a-day. has it, and I'd ditch it in a sec- ond if I thought my sole would let me get away with it. r Anyhow, this latest twist ofg foot hadidefinitely cooleddour relationship, and I was deadt set on ignoring the matter com-i pletely until the morning after,I when I noticed that, much to . my dismay, that olde-ankle-o'- mine had suddenly become ther Ankle that Ate Tokyo, completeG with the shape and hue of last year's cantalope. The itch to seek outside advice became toos much as an unholy pain sent' visions of empirin dancing< through my head. So it was that the affable Dial-A-Rider got stuck with a none too affable passenger who'd added Health, Service and unnecessary aggra- vation to his appointed rounds. "Have an accident?" asked the wheelman as he madly1 lurched us into Washtenaw traf- fic. "No thanks, just had one," r I snapped, in no mood to be or- iginal I He WAS the kind of guy whoj would laugh and say "Good one." after you put gunpowder into his bong. A glutton for punishment. "How'd it happen?" he quer- ied, undaunted and painfully genuine. "I don't know. I was walk- in' down the street, minding I WAS just getting into a racey short in "Urology Di- gest" when my name greeted me. T looked up to see a doc- tor, my file in hand, deftly slid- ing a copy of "Wrestling Heroes" into his back pocket. As I stood up, a big knowing, senile broke across his face. The nurse turned the corner and we got down to business. I sat down, took off my sneak- er, and unwrapned the Ace. bandage from my foot. The doctor expertly deposited my shoe near an open window and asked for my I.D. card. t "327-50-7460-4," he m u s e d, raising the lever to stamp it. "My friends call me '327 for short," I offered. A VAGUE smile crossed his, face and quickly disappeared. "Well now," he cleared his throat, in full command. "First off, I want you to take a walk down to the end of the hall." "Why's hat, Doc?" I balked. "You want me to prove that4 it hurts?" "NO ,actirinlly I want von to register with the cashier." I obligingly trudged off, watched my I. D. go throughI another beating, and returned. "Okay," said the doctor. "I thikv n t htr. an nnstairs for UGLI comes to the rescue when you need it most By JEFF RISTINE You probably learned the routine long ago. The instructor casually assigns a ten-page report, worth about one-fourth of your final gr ade. You spend quite a bit of time trying to pick an appropriate research topic which is, of course, original, important and about as exciting as a pile of sawdust. Then you let the project slide until the weekend before it's due. WHEN YOU can no longer afford to put off the assignment, you finally take notebook and pencil in hand and head reluctantly toward the nearest library. The card catalog lists dozens of books (most are gone) in your se- lected area of investigation and you pick three or four to plagarize. The library has saved you again. You'll probably be pleased to know you can continue this somewhat shady tradition here at the University - and come out of it as guilt-free as you did in high school. The many campus libraries store innumerable volumes on everything from aardvarks to zymurgy, and your little yellow ID card lets you bor- rowm anv of them for weeks at a time. You graduate Library," as it is officially desig- nated, is located between the central Diag region and the West Engineering Arch and offers all the comforts of a Mercury space capsule. THE NOISE level in the UGLI is not unlike that of Echo Canyon. Its tiled floors cry for a carpet with every step and, more than once, you'll find yourself sitting next to three or four persons shamelessly chatting the latest drivel in tones rarely, if ever, ap- proaching a whisper. The murky duplication machines can be heard from almost any- where - whoever constructed the sound- proof rooms on the second floor should be sued for breach of contract. But despite its many shortcomings, the UGLI can probably get you through your term paper. Besides its rows and rows of books, the Undergraduate Library has easy- to-get-to back issues of dozens of popular magazines. There's also a collection of the latest newspapers, possibly including your hometown journal, on the ground floor near the main lobby. If you prefer plastic to newsprint, try the .: