An thing fr t e Team THESE PEOPLE ARE NUTS. EVERY Si- urday morning, they're up before dawn to coat themselves in war paint, pack up for the road and fire up the grill in preparation for the gridiron war of the week. They're the fanatic fans, kickoff crazies and sideline psychos hitting their prime every fall at colleges across the nation. It's ridiculous to most, but to them, it's religion. "I may be an Irish-Catholic," says Boston College sophomore Kevin Sullivan. "But on game days, I'm a football fan." Sullivan says he loves to be rude and crude while rooting for his Eagles - espe- cially against the U. of Notre Dame. He was ready last season when "that other Catholic school" catie to Boston. He and his friends made T-shirts with big letters on the front greeting the Irish: "SOU"TH BEND OVER!" s I -n2w When the Irish ran by Sullivan, he demon- strated the gesture. "I just wanted to make sure those heathens knew what the shirt meant," ie says. "[Boston College] is a Catholic school, but that's why the games are on Saturday. We'll repent on Sunday." U. of Michigan sophomore Andy Smith doesn't wear shirts. Instead, he paints "GO BLUE!" on his body and strolls around Michigan Stadium. "I'm on a quest for the manliest tail- gaters of all time," he says. "When they see my maize-and-blue chest, they invite me over. Crisp Saturday afternoons, burnt hot dogs, football and free beer is what college is all about." But, as U. Of Southern California sopho- more Kerry Krcntler says, going topless can have its consequences. "My boyfriend and his fraternity broth- ers painted 'GO TROJANS!' oi their chests for the California--Berkeley game last year," she says. "But they got sunburns and had ')GO TROJANS!' branded on their bodies for weeks." Michigan State U. police are on their guard when Wolverine fans visit East Lansing. Seems the school's mascot statue, Sparty, attracts visi- tors the night before the game. "They like to paint certain body parts blue," says Michigan State sopho- more Walced Ezzat. The fun usually stops short of police action, but that depends on where yon are. At home games, the pranks are seen as good clean fun. On the road, however, rival fans might not be as tolerant. At Notre Dame life is relatively docile. Some ded- icatcd fans take their reli- gions set iously - both football and Christianity. Sophomo re Eric Sharagc says the colossal painting of Ch r ist tha t overlooks Notre D a me Sta dium is respected. "We go to church before every game like the players do," he says. "Touchdown Jesus is a big fn." Maybe. But church on a Saturday morning? It does- n't get any crazier than that. uigh Time for a Change? l YU THINK DROOPY-EYE[D P0THEADS teeking of incense and brotherly love are teonly ones advocating the diecriminal- ization of marijuana, tke again. The National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) has been steadi- ly gaining support since it was founded its 1970, although it weathered a small slump in the '80s just-say-no era. Traditionally strong on college campuses, NORML advocates an end to all criminal penalties for personal pos- session, use and cultivation of marijuana. NORML chapters have experienced a wide range of reactions frost students and faculty. Tiffany Davis, a senior at the U. of Vir- ginia and member of NORML, says the stig- ma attached to members distracts people from the real issues. "People think that if you promote marijua- na, you're a stoner," Davis says. "For use, it's just recognizing that it's a valuable plant and that the government is wasting money by enforcing marijuana laws." Keith Meadows, a sophomore at U. of Wisconsin, Waukesha, and president of the campus NORML, says students are afraid of marijuana because they don't know much about it. "One girl started crying because she didn't want the group on campus. She said marijuana kills people, though she had never heard of anybody who had died from it." NORML peaked, both in attention and membership, from 1974 to 1980, when 11 states reduced criminal penalties for the pos- session of small amounts of marijuana. Mem- bership declined during the Reagan/Bush era, but support has started to crop up again, with 50 to 75 percent growth per year. Most health officials on college campuses find the renewed interest troubling. Frank Calvin, assistant director of the health center at the U. of Texas, Arlington, says legalizing marijuana could have adverse effects on the way students learn. "Marijuana shouldn't be a part of the learn- ing atmosphere," he says. It has a sensory-dulling effect.... You have no drive for anything." New concentrations of marijuana are making the drug more dangerous than ever, Calvin says. "The stuff now is at least 10 to 20 times more powerful than the old stuff [from the 'U0s]," Calvin says. Although starting an organization like NORML on campus wasn't difficult, Davis says that keeping it alive is. "We don't get much support at all," she says. "Once people realize how common [the use of marijuana] is, the sooner they'll realize that enforcing marijuana laws is a waste of taxpayers' money. Ben Eden,U. of Texas, Arlington/ Photo by Sal Paradise Nicholas J. Cotsonika, U. of Michigan/Photo by Jill Oczkowski, Sam Houston Pulling for the team can be a hair-raising StateU.,'94-'95U. Photo experience. Contest Winner 16 U. Magazr. 'eOctober 1995