2A — Monday, December 2, 2019
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
News

TUESDAY:
By Design
THURSDAY:
Twitter Talk
FRIDAY:
Behind the Story
WEDNESDAY:
This Week in History

MONDAY:
Looking at the Numbers

Sudoku Syndication
http://sudokusyndication.com/sudoku/generator/print/

1 of 1
6/17/09 10:57 AM

3 7
2

8 1
5

4

1
6

8

7

7

2

7
6 1

9

5 7

2

6

3

3
9

7

6
1

4 1
6

5

BAD TIMING
puzzle by sudokusyndication.com

DESIGN BY TAYLOR SCHOTT

The Michigan Daily (ISSN 0745-967) is published Monday through Friday during 
the fall and winter terms by students at the University OF Michigan. One copy is 
available free of charge to all readers. Additional copies may be picked up at the 
Daily’s office for $2. Subscriptions for September-April are $250 and year long 
subscriptions are $275. University affiliates are subject to a reduced subscription 
rate. On-campus subscriptions for fall term are $35. Subscriptions must be prepaid. 

FINNTAN STORER
Managing Editor 
 frstorer@michigandaily.com

GRACE KAY and ELIZABETH LAWRENCE 
Managing News Editors news@michigandaily.com

Senior News Editors: Sayali Amin, Rachel Cunningham, Remy Farkas, Leah 
Graham, Amara Shaikh 
Assistant News Editors: Barbara Collins, Julia Fanzeres, Claire Hao, Alex 
Harring, Angelina Little, Madeline McLaughlin, Ben Rosenfeld, Emma Stein, 
Zayna Syed, Liat Weinstein

JOEL DANILEWITZ and MAGDALENA MIHAYLOVA
Editorial Page Editors tothedaily@michigandaily.com

Senior Opinion Editors: Emily Considine, Krystal Hur, Ethan Kessler, Miles 
Stephenson, Erin White

ARYA NAIDU and VERITY STURM
Managing Arts Editors 
 arts@michigandaily.com

ALEXIS RANKIN and ALEC COHEN
Managing Photo Editors photo@michigandaily.com

ANDREA PÉREZ BALDERRAMA
Statement Editor statement@michigandaily.com 

Deputy Editors: Matthew Harmon, Shannon Ors

SILAS LEE and EMILY STILLMAN
Managing Copy Editors copydesk@michigandaily.com

Senior Copy Editors: Dominick Sokotoff, Olivia Sedlacek, Reece Meyhoefer 

CASEY TIN and HASSAAN ALI WATTOO
Managing Online Editors 
 webteam@michigandaily.com

Senior Web Developers: Jonathon Liu, Abha Panda, Ryan Siu, David Talbot, 
Samantha Cohen

ELI SIDER
Managing Video Editor video@michigandaily.com

Senior Michigan in Color Editors: Lorna Brown, Samuel So, Ana Maria 
Sanchez-Castillo, Efe Osagie, Danyel Tharakan
Assistant Michigan in Color Editors: Harnoor Singh, Nada Eldawy, Maya 
Mokh 

ZELJKO KOSPIC
Special Projects Manager

ANITA MICHAUD
Brand Manager

Senior Sports Editors: Anna Marcus, Aria Gerson, Ben Katz, Mark Calcagno, 
Theo Mackie, Tien Le
Assistant Sports Editors: Bailey Johnson, Bennett Bramson, Connor Brennan, 
Jacob Kopnick, Jorge Cazares, Rian Ratnavale 

Senior Video Editors: Ryan O’Connor, Joseph Sim

Senior Social Media Editor: Allie Phillips 

Stanford Lipsey Student Publications Building
420 Maynard St.
Ann Arbor, MI 48109-1327
www.michigandaily.com

ARTS SECTION
arts@michigandaily.com

SPORTS SECTION
sports@michigandaily.com

ADVERTISING
dailydisplay@gmail.com

NEWS TIPS
news@michigandaily.com

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
tothedaily@michigandaily.com

EDITORIAL PAGE
opinion@michigandaily.com

TOMMY DYE
Business Manager
734-418-4115 ext. 1241
tomedye@michigandaily.com

MAYA GOLDMAN
Editor in Chief
734-418-4115 ext. 1251
mayagold@michigandaily.com

PHOTOGRAPHY SECTION
photo@michigandaily.com

NEWSROOM
734-418-4115 opt. 3 

CORRECTIONS
corrections@michigandaily.com

MAX MARCOVITCH and ETHAN SEARS 
Managing Sports Editors sportseditors@michigandaily.com

Senior Arts Editors: Clara Scott, Emma Chang, Cassandra Mansuetti, Sam 
Della Fera, Trina Pal
Arts Beat Editors: John Decker, Sayan Ghosh, Mike Watkins, Ally Owens, 
Stephen Satarino, Izzy Hasslund, Margaret Sheridan 

ROSEANNE CHAO and JACK SILBERMAN
Managing Design Editors 
design@michigandaily.com
Senior Design Editor: Sherry Chen 

NA’KIA CHANNEY and CARLY RYAN
Michigan in Color Editors michiganincolor@michigandaily.com

MADALASA CHAUDHARI and HANNAH MESKIN 
Managing Social Media Editors

Editorial Staff

Business Staff

RYAN KELLY
Sales Manager

ROBERT WAGMAN
Marketing Consulting Manager

Senior Photo Editors: Alexandria Pompei, Natalie Stephens, Alice Liu, Allison 
Engkvist, Danyel Tharakan
Assistant Photo Editors: Miles Macklin, Keemya Esmael, Madeline Hinkley, 
Ryan McLoughlin

MOLLY WU
Creative Director

CATHERINE NOUHAN
Managing Podcast Editor

Against an Ohio State team that 
left Ann Arbor 12-0, the College 
Football Playoff likely in front of it, the 
Wolverines (9-3 overall, 6-2 Big Ten) 
had to play a near-perfect game to keep 
up. All it took to put the game out of 
reach was a few mistakes.
Senior safety Josh Metellus let 
Buckeye receiver Chris Olave get a step 
on him late in the first quarter. Seconds 
later, Olave was streaking down the 
right sideline for a 57-yard touchdown, 
turning a 7-6 game into a 14-6 game. 
A few drives later, with Michigan 
trying to cut into an eight-point deficit, 
Patterson dropped a snap in the red 
zone. It was the second of three first-
half drives that got to the red zone. 
Michigan got a combined nine points 
from them. 
“We knew we were gonna have to 
put up points and we needed to score 
a couple touchdowns in the red area,” 
Patterson said. “... You can’t fumble the 
ball down there.”
Following 
the 
fumble, 
the 
Wolverines’ defense seemed to have 
secured a monumental stop, but senior 
VIPER Khaleke Hudson jumped 
offsides on a punt. On the very next 
play, Ohio State quarterback Justin 

Fields sailed a 47-yard post route 
to Garrett Wilson, and on the play 
after that, running back J.K. Dobbins 
walked into the end zone for his third 
of four touchdowns on the day. At that 
point, with just over three minutes 
left in the first half, the Buckeyes led, 
28-13. Michigan wouldn’t get within 
one score again.
Despite Patterson’s 300 yards on the 
day, and despite an offense that kept 
pace for as long as it could, that was all 
it took for the floodgates to open. 
Dobbins 
opened 
the 
second 
half with a 41-yard run, then got 21 
more when the Wolverines left him 
uncovered in the flat. On the sideline, 
Don Brown screamed and clapped his 
hands. It all built to a six-yard K.J. Hill 
touchdown to extend the Buckeyes’ 
lead to 35-16, and all but ending the 
competitive portion of the afternoon.
As much as winning this game 
was an expectation few thought the 
Wolverines could meet, the sting will 
linger, just as it always does. Harbaugh 
is now 0-5 against the Buckeyes. Don 
Brown’s defense has given up 1,144 
yards against them in the last two years. 
Fields said afterwards that Ohio State 
takes this game more seriously, and 
true or not, Michigan can’t look to 
any on-field result to refute him.

OSU
From Page 1A

ALEXIS RANKIN/Daily
Students from conservation biology visit the Detroit Zoo as part of a class field trip to learn about conservation practices Saturday morning. 

Arbors Wellness opened its 
doors at 9 a.m. but prioritized 
medical patients before making 
its first recreational sales. The 
first sales were made to Lansing 
resident Ryan Basore and Flint 
native John Sinclair, longtime 
marijuana activists who have 
both faced arrests for marijuana 
related charges. Sinclair’s 1969 
arrest for marijuana possession 
and subsequent 10 year sentence 
spurred protests, including a 1971 
concert held at the University of 
Michigan at which John Lennon 
and Yoko Ono performed, entitled 
the John Sinclair Freedom Rally.
“The first few sales were to 
very historic people that have 
been fighting prohibition for 
quite some time,” Moroz said. 
“I was really happy to be able 
to provide them legal sales of 
cannabis for something they had 
been working towards for years 
at this point.”
Jacque Kyllonen, a Washtenaw 
County resident who arrived 
at 9 a.m. and had been waiting 
for two hours outside Arbors 
Wellness, said she felt the first 
day of legal recreational sales was 
an important historical moment. 
“I’m here joining a part of 
history,” Kyllonen said. “I don’t 
have a medical card, and I use 
this as medicine, so it’s kind of 
cool. I have fibromyalgia, and 
I have chronic migraines, so it 
definitely helps.”
Those who braved the cold 
were welcomed with free coffee 
and 
donuts 
outside 
Arbors 
Wellness. Melissa Mueller, a sales 
manager for the cannabis brand 
Mary’s Medicinals, which is 
sold at Arbors Wellness, walked 
down the line passing out donuts 
to show the brand’s support for 
Arbors Wellness. 
“Arbors 
Wellness 
has 
supported us for a long time, so 
we’re just here passing out donuts 
for the people who are waiting in 
line this morning,” Mueller said. 
Outside 
Greenstone 
Provisions, spirits were similarly 
high. Sean Ryan, a senior at 
Eastern Michigan University, had 
been in line for about 90 minutes 
and said he was excited to be 

able to easily buy recreational 
products he enjoys.
“We love easy access to 
edibles, it’s fantastic,” Ryan said. 
“It’s dope.”
Moroz sees both safety and 
economic benefits to legalizing 
recreational usage. 
“To be able to have an avenue 
that is both regulated and safe 
and controlled and provides 
revenue to the state is really 
a great place to have as far as 
cannabis,” Moroz said. “It should 
be a great thing moving forward 
for our company as well as the 
whole state of Michigan.”
LSA senior Eric TerBush 
was a part of Green Wolverine, 
a cannabis business student 
organization, when the group 
worked with Matthew Abel, one 
of the authors of Proposal 1, while 
the proposal was being drafted. 
TerBush also currently works 
at Benzinga, a financial news 
company in Detroit, where he 
manages their cannabis media. 
TerBush thinks the market for 
marijuana will not see many 
immediate changes.
“I think the most prominent 
changes we’re going to see are 
exacerbated supply shortages. 
Generally there’s been a lot of 
issues with supply shortages 
in the past year,” TerBush 
said. “LARA (Licensing and 
Regulatory Affair) has really 
dragged their toes as they slowly 
grant licenses and slowly grant 
renewal paperwork to people 
… and (the limited number of 
suppliers) has really not met up 
with demand.”
TerBush said he imagines most 
students who are buying from 
the black market will continue 
to do so out of convenience until 
cannabis 
companies 
invest 
more in cannabis production as 
they see increased profits. He 
imagines a future decrease in 
prices and increase in supply has 
the potential to decrease black 
market incentives.
“I think it sets up the initial 
stage for a black market to 
decrease in size,” TerBush said. 
“The prices are going to suck for 
a while, store openings are going 
to suck for a while, shortages are 
probably going to happen for a 
while. It’s a slow, gradual process 
that we’re working towards, but 
in the moment it’s a bit rocky.”

MARIJUANA
From Page 1A

Read more at 
MichiganDaily.com

