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Pot activists gather for annual 420 event
Authorities show restraint at CU
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Longmont
Daily Times-Call - April 21, 2005
By Brad Turner
The Daily Times-Call
BOULDER —
Crafty school officials at the University of Colorado turned on
the sprinklers Wednesday afternoon at Farrand Field to try to
curb “420,” an annual event that celebrates and advocates
the legalization of marijuana use.
Craftier pot
enthusiasts clogged the irrigation system with wadded T-shirts
or snapped off the sprinkler heads completely and carried on as
planned.
A dense haze
of smoke rose from the cheering crowd of at least 1,000 students
and activists at 4:20 p.m. as about a dozen CU police officers,
and hundreds of students, looked on.
The crowd
quickly got soaked, thanks to errant sprinkler streams and light
rain, but stayed on the field.
“If
it wasn’t raining, this place would be even more packed,”
Mason Tvert, director of the marijuana advocacy group Safer Alternative
for Enjoyable Recreation, said happily as he surveyed the crowd.
At about 3:30
p.m., Tvert’s group held a rally near the Coors Events Center
supporting referendums to make punishments for marijuana offenses
no more serious than sanctions for alcohol-related offenses at
CU and Colorado State University. Leaders at the two schools recently
declined to adopt such a policy, despite support from a majority
of voters in school elections.
Tvert said
he did not condone any illegal activity, including marijuana use
or sprinkler vandalism, but did question why police felt Wednesday’s
event was an important problem.
“They
obviously care more about one day of student marijuana use than
they do about 365 days of alcohol abuse,” Tvert said.
While the
term “420” has a number of urban myths attached to
it — including that it’s police radio code for smoking
pot — it was coined in 1971 by a group of San Rafael (Calif.)
High School students who met at 4:20 p.m. to get high. Now it
is shorthand for marijuana and its culture, and 420 events (4:20
on 4/20) are held around the world.
In Boulder,
a crowd traditionally gathers at Farrand Field at 4:20 p.m. April
20 each year.
School officials
vowed to crack down on this year’s event in an effort to
improve CU’s reputation, which suffered several blows recently
in the form of football recruiting scandals, controversy surrounding
professor Ward Churchill, riots on University Hill and the alcohol-related
death of a fraternity pledge.
No arrests
were made during Wednesday’s event, CU Police Lt. Tim McGraw
said, and only two students were referred to the school’s
judicial affairs department.
But those
two busts may be only “a start,” he said. Officers
videotaped the gathering and may ticket or arrest anyone they
identify, he said.
Despite officials’
vows to tighten enforcement, officers had to be realistic about
policing the party, McGraw said.
“We
have no illusions about stopping this in one year,” he said.
“We would have to kill a fly with a sledgehammer to do that.”
Police were
surprised at how relatively responsible the crowd was, McGraw
said.
“Obviously,
we don’t condone it from a police standpoint. But if you
look at the people out there, they’re picking up trash,”
he said. A
brief hailstorm effectively ended the event at about 4:45 p.m.
The local
chapter of the National Organization for Reform of Marijuana Laws
held a second rally at 4:20 p.m. Wednesday at Canyon Boulevard
and Broadway in Boulder.
The event,
attended by about 200 people, was intended to publicize NORML’s
push to reduce to $5 the fine for possessing an ounce or less
of pot, group member Paul Tiger said. |