Pubdate: Mon, 19 Apr 2010
Source: Record, The (Troy, NY)
Copyright: 2010sThe Record
Contact:  http://www.troyrecord.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1724
Author: Patrick H. Donges

SCOPE OF CANNABIS CELEBRATIONS VARY AS CAMPUSES PREPARE  FOR '4-20'

SARATOGA SPRINGS - What began as four high school  students meeting 
after practice in 1971 to look for a  rumored plot of marijuana 
plants grew into a  celebration now ubiquitous among cannabis 
consumers across the nation as "4-20."

At 4:20 p.m. on April 20, college students across the  country light 
up the illicit substance, whether rolled  into cigarettes, packed 
into pipes, or in at least one  case, contained within a large, pink, 
paper-mache  octopus.

The latter was seen near Skidmore College's Haupt Pond  last year as 
some students smoked in plain sight of  faculty and campus safety 
officials. Outrage over  reports of their behavior prompted the 
school to take  action and hold a series of meetings with 
officials  from the Saratoga Springs Police Department, the  Saratoga 
Springs City School District, the Saratoga  County Alcohol and 
Substance Abuse Prevention Council  and Saratoga County District 
Attorney James A. Murphy  III.

"The meetings have been a good way to recommit our  efforts," Murphy 
said last week.

Skidmore, ranked second last year on The Princeton  Review's "reefer 
madness" list, isn't the only campus  to garner attention for the 
illegal spring exhibition.  In 2009, the school joined the University 
of California  at Santa Cruz, Bard College, the University of Vermont 
and the University of Colorado at Boulder in a list of  the top five 
institutions perceived as being the most  pot-predominant.

There is no specific criterion that addresses public  cannabis 
consumption on April 20, and the "reefer  madness" schools have had 
varying experiences with the  event.

"That's a rather spurious review," an unidentified Bard  College 
public relations employee said of the ranking.  She said she wasn't 
sure the school had an official  stance on the event and referred 
comment to an official  who was unavailable for comment by press 
time. Bard  topped the "reefer madness" list in 2008.

"(Institutions) tend to endorse our rankings as very  accurate if 
they view something as a positive," said  Seamus Mullarkey, senior 
editor of Princeton Review's  "Best 371 Colleges." "They tend to 
question the validity if they view something as a negative."

Most of the data used for the rankings come from an  online survey 
where participants must register with a  valid school e-mail address 
before submitting answers.  The ranking is based on how students 
answer the survey  question, "How widely is marijuana used at your school?"

"Student gatherings at the University of Vermont on  April 20 have 
gotten smaller and smaller over the last  decade, and in the last 
several years there has been no  activity at all," said Thomas 
Gustafson, the college's  vice president for student and campus life. 
"We are  dubious of the results," he said of their Princeton  Review rank.

"It's a bunch of people walking around smoking pot and  high-fiving 
each other," said University of Colorado at  Boulder media relations 
director Bronson Hilliard. An  alumnus of the school, Hilliard said 
the reputation of  Boulder as a vacation spot, combined with Internet 
publicity, has turned the display into an occasion  dreaded by 
faculty and students alike.

A state university of 30,000 students, the school has  seen 
attendance at their "4-20" display grow from a few  hundred 
participants five years ago to around 10,000  last year.

Cameron Naish, a University of Colorado senior and  managing editor 
of the school's student newspaper, said  that while he didn't think 
the event was a hazard, when  the clock hits 4:20 p.m., those passing 
by do  experience psychoactive effects due to second-hand  smoke. "If 
I was worried about passing a drug test, it  would make me nervous," he said.

Hilliard expressed frustration over the lack of media  attention two 
years ago when the school received an  award from the White House for 
being among those  schools with outstanding records of community 
service.  "Absolutely," he said when asked if the event  negatively 
affects the reputation of the school.

"We've tried a number of different strategies to  disperse the crowd, 
but none of them were effective and  some were even 
counterproductive," he said of measures  that included taking photos 
of the crowd and turning  sprinklers on during the event.

For the past three years, the university has sent out a  campus-wide 
e-mail notifying students that the display  is unsanctioned and 
unlawful, but must be tolerated to  maintain order among the crowd.

"Skidmore students are role models, and whether they  accept it or 
not, they need to understand that,"  Skidmore College's Dean of 
Student Affairs Rochelle  Calhoun said Thursday. On Friday, Calhoun 
sent an  e-mail to students outlining state law, school policy  and 
the consequences students will face if they are  caught possessing 
the drug on April 20. As a new policy  measure, tents and other 
enclosures are prohibited for  use that day.

"As long as the law of the land in New York state is  what it is and 
our policies are what they are, we need  to uphold them," she said. 
"I don't see a middle  ground."

District Attorney Murphy said that campus safety  officials often 
call Saratoga Springs police to make  arrests, and that substance 
abuse counseling is  mandatory as a condition for the dismissal of a 
first-time unlawful possession of marijuana violation.

"High school students are looking to college students  as role 
models," said Judy Ekman, executive director of  the Alcohol and 
Substance Abuse Prevention Council. She  went on to praise those 
Skidmore students who take the  time to volunteer for her 
organization and other groups  with which the school has established 
records of service by students.

"In real terms, at 4:20 in the afternoon, they're in  class," she 
said of the majority of students. "People  tend to generalize on the 
negative and not generalize  on the positive."

Students can fill out the Princeton Review's 2010  survey at 
http://survey.review.com. Their book of the  "Best 373 Colleges" will 
be published in July.  Skidmore's campus safety non-emergency line 
can be  reached at 580-5567.
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MAP posted-by: Keith Brilhart