The Michigan Daily-Friday, June 19, 1981-Page9 it shift with the AAPD soon. "You'll like Richard," he told me, "He's a real colorful man, a fun partner." Before picking up his partner, though, here would be a quick run through the Maynard Street parking structure. "Lots of smoking, lots of drinking in there," Heinold informed me. Sure enough, within a minute there were two arrests, but for neither of the above of- fenses. These would be "Urinating in Public" violations, charged against two teenagers on the second level. Since they were more or less "caught in the act," there was little resistance. One of them, the one with a Pinckney driver's license, threatened a law suit as we drove away, but Officer Heinold hardly noticed. 9:00 P.M. Richard Blake, Heinold's par- tner, is a tall, portly black man with a bushy moustache and a slick twirling ability with his nightstick. Well-known to the merchants and street-people near campus, Blake is clearly pleased with his role on the force. "You make a lot of friends walking this beat," he said as we drove off. "You form relationships that will last." H EINOLD TOOK the car downtown, and we paid our first of many visits on the Fourth Street crowd - people who were reputedly prostitutes, pimps, drug dealers, or thieves, and others who were visibly alcohol-wrecked, impoverished, and idle. "They'll stand in the middle of a downpour," Heinold said of this latter group. "They won't even know that it's raining." "Get off the sidewalk, Charlie," called Blake from the passenger seat. Charlie, a heavily dressed man with a broad-rimmed hat, sat against the front of the Velvet Touch adult bookstore. "Aw, move on," he responded wearily. "I'm not kidding, Charlie, get off the sidewalk," Blake repeated as Heinold drove the car forward. At the next inter- section, encountering another squad car headed the opposite way, Heinold greeted the officer. "Will you make sure Charlie gets off the sidewalk back there?" 'he asked. "Sure, no problem," said the cop in the second cruiser, as if this was a com- mon request. "There are people on this job," Richard explained as we began radar monitoring the traffic on Stadium Boulevard, "You can watch them go to a high point, and you can watch them drop." 10:30 P.M. Heinold and Blake patrolled the driveways of the Ann Arbor Airport, which is considered University terrain to the AAPD because of the student group the Michigan Flyers. There was no trouble, only the small matter of an apparently abandoned Renault Le Car facing the run- way. The cruiser approached the Renault, both officers wondering aloud what it could be doing at this location. When two heads appeared suddenly from the front seat - male and female - their curiosities were dispelled. Heinold suggested an alternative site for' the couple to view planes taking off - down the driveway a little way and to the left - and they politely followed his suggestion. 12:00 A.M. After a break at the nearby Wendy's restaurant, we continued the night shift. For a change of pace, we would hit the north side, specifically the Cedar Bend Road-Island Drive Park area, where a lot of people tend to come out at night. Driving down the Cedar Bend gravel road, past the popular "Lover's Lane" spots, there were no lovers - or anyone - in sight. As we drove ,into Island Drive Park, however, we did interrupt a social activity of some sort. A large group of black men were huddled around a picnic table, and appeared somewhat startled by our ap- pearince. "It's either a crap game or a good sized pokey game," Blake muttered as the car cra led to a stop on the gravel road. "No vehidles after 10 p.m., gentlemen, you know that," Heinold announced. They obediently dispersed to their respective carsand left the park. 12:30 A.M. Having not received a call from headquarters in some time, the two officers decided to patrol the North Cam- pu parking lots for awhile. Again, there were two instant sitting ducks. In the School of Music lot were two youths, who were apparently busy rolling joints when the officers arrived. They looked up from the car they were sitting in and grimaced helplessly. Officer Blake seemed particularly im- pressed by an Army mess kit that was loaded with a rolling machine, papers, an empty vile, a pipe, an extra bowl, and many assorted seeds. "Going to grow your own crop?" he asked. One of the suspects solemnly shook his head. After writing up their $5 possession-of- marijuana tickets, Heinold and Blake decided to check out the covert party locations east of campus. For many miles of wooded roads, we drove, occasionally stopping at tree-cleared lots or open fields, where the parties tend to transpire. But at this time, on this Friday night, there was no one present on this route. "This time of night, you've got to dig up anything you're going to do," Blake said. 1:30 A.M. We returned to the station and dropped off the "evidence" from the marijuana arrest. While Heinold delivered it to the proper compartment in the evidence room, Blake and I spoke with the duty command officer, Donald Carnahan. Although he described this night as "quite slow" for a Friday, he expressed skepticism that the tranquility would remain for long. "You get two or three slow nights, and then the roof falls in. You never know," he said.