News (Media Awareness Project) - US MI: Edu: The First 'High Noon' March |
Title: | US MI: Edu: The First 'High Noon' March |
Published On: | 2007-04-04 |
Source: | Michigan Daily (U of MI, Edu) |
Fetched On: | 2008-01-12 08:59:03 |
THE FIRST 'HIGH NOON' MARCH
Thirty-five years ago, students couldn't RSVP to Hash Bash on
Facebook.com - word-of-mouth and fliers were the only advertisements
for the event. But the lack of easy, online publicity didn't stop
scores of students from gathering for the first-ever Hash Bash during
the first weekend of April in 1972.
The first Hash Bash was held as a celebration after the success of
the "Free John Now" campaign that arouse in response to the
incarceration of political activist and Ann Arbor local, John Sinclair.
Sinclair was arrested and sentenced to 10 years in prison for the
possession of two marijuana joints in July 1969.
He quickly became an icon of the counter-cluture movement and
inspired a number of protests around the country.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono sponsored a Free John Now rally at Crisler
Arena on Dec. 10, 1971. They argued that Sinclair's incarceration had
been cruel and unusual punishment and that Sinclair was convicted as
a result of police entrapment.
Three days after the rally at Crisler Arena, Sinclair's case was
re-examined by the Michigan Supreme Court. He was released from
prison on Dec. 13, 1971.
The first Hash Bash occurred three and a half months after Sinclair's
release from jail. The leaders of the 1960s counterculture, many of
them students and young adults living in Ann Arbor, were prominent
participants in the first Hash Bash.
The event included speeches, demonstrations in favor of marijuana
legalization, music and street vending.
Police officers have often turned a blind eye to some of the drug use
that typically accompanies the festival.
Over the years, student attendance at the Hash Bash "High Noon" march
on the Diag has waned. But enthusiasts and pro-marijuana advocates
have continued holding the event in Ann Arbor partly because of its
history and the city's relatively lax marijuana laws.
In Ann Arbor (except on campus, which is under state law), possession
of marijuana is a civil infraction rather than a criminal offense.
Organizers at the first event hoped it would become a tradition.
"The hash festival should become an annual affair, and we hope to see
everybody out here again next year," one organizer told The Michigan
Daily at the time.
Thirty-five years later, the tradition is still alive.
Thirty-five years ago, students couldn't RSVP to Hash Bash on
Facebook.com - word-of-mouth and fliers were the only advertisements
for the event. But the lack of easy, online publicity didn't stop
scores of students from gathering for the first-ever Hash Bash during
the first weekend of April in 1972.
The first Hash Bash was held as a celebration after the success of
the "Free John Now" campaign that arouse in response to the
incarceration of political activist and Ann Arbor local, John Sinclair.
Sinclair was arrested and sentenced to 10 years in prison for the
possession of two marijuana joints in July 1969.
He quickly became an icon of the counter-cluture movement and
inspired a number of protests around the country.
John Lennon and Yoko Ono sponsored a Free John Now rally at Crisler
Arena on Dec. 10, 1971. They argued that Sinclair's incarceration had
been cruel and unusual punishment and that Sinclair was convicted as
a result of police entrapment.
Three days after the rally at Crisler Arena, Sinclair's case was
re-examined by the Michigan Supreme Court. He was released from
prison on Dec. 13, 1971.
The first Hash Bash occurred three and a half months after Sinclair's
release from jail. The leaders of the 1960s counterculture, many of
them students and young adults living in Ann Arbor, were prominent
participants in the first Hash Bash.
The event included speeches, demonstrations in favor of marijuana
legalization, music and street vending.
Police officers have often turned a blind eye to some of the drug use
that typically accompanies the festival.
Over the years, student attendance at the Hash Bash "High Noon" march
on the Diag has waned. But enthusiasts and pro-marijuana advocates
have continued holding the event in Ann Arbor partly because of its
history and the city's relatively lax marijuana laws.
In Ann Arbor (except on campus, which is under state law), possession
of marijuana is a civil infraction rather than a criminal offense.
Organizers at the first event hoped it would become a tradition.
"The hash festival should become an annual affair, and we hope to see
everybody out here again next year," one organizer told The Michigan
Daily at the time.
Thirty-five years later, the tradition is still alive.
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