Sunday, August 12, 2012

"We smoked it all" Marijuana and Eugene, Ore. are tiedtogether like laces in a football

A recent study said that athletes claim smoking pot before a game
helps them focus as We Just Can't see the Ball. On a frosty January
evening in Eugene, a University of Oregon student plops onto a couch,
nestledbetween a whirring space heater and a muted television at a
friend's off-campus apartment, and pulls a nugget from the bag. At his
feet sits a backpack emblazoned with the logo of the Rose Bowl, which
heand his teammates had won barely aweek before. "Purple Kush," he
says of his preferred marijuana strand, which he rolls into a hefty
joint between his forefingers and thumbs. "It's pretty much all I
smoke." The joint, to which he adds a dash of tobacco to make a
spliff, is typical for this student-athlete."Bongs and pipes mean more
evidence," he says. He lights up, kicks back and exhales a dense
cloud. Normally, he'd pass the spliffto one of his Oregon football
teammates, but tonight he smokes alone. "Most of the guys are waiting
until after winter workouts," he says. Once those conclude in March,
he adds, they'll gather in clusters to partake together. About half
the team smokes, he estimates. "It's a team thing. Like video games."
The Ducks are savoring their win over Wisconsin, Oregon's first
victory in a Rose Bowl since 1917 and Chip Kelly's first postseason
triumph as head coach. Earlier today, the school buzzed as the team
made its victory lap around campus. Now, as one Duck relishes another
kind of high, he wants to make something clear.
"It's not just us," he says, taking another hit. "If you think
Oregon's the only team smoking weed, you're crazy.""Business here is
almost overwhelming," says a student-dealer who lives on -- no joke --
High Street. "Here, everybody smokes." Not surprisingly, The Princeton
Review and High Times both have ranked the University of Oregon among
the most pot-friendlyschools. Another telltale, anecdotalsign: Into
the 1990s, the Grateful Dead made Autzen Stadium a regular tour stop.
"It's the weed capital of the world," says former Duck Reuben Droughns
. "Long dreads. Girls with hairy armpits. Where there's hippies,
there's weed." marijuana - ESPN but the rest of The Story - 16 U.S.C.
United States Code, 2011 Edition
Title 16 - CONSERVATION
CHAPTER 3 - FORESTS; FOREST SERVICE; REFORESTATION; MANAGEMENT
SUBCHAPTER I - GENERAL PROVISIONS
Sec. 559b - Prevention of manufacture, etc., of marijuana andother
controlled substances
§559b. Prevention of manufacture, etc., of marijuana and other
controlled substances
(a) Purpose
The purpose of sections 559b to 559f of this title is to authorize the
Secretary of Agriculture (hereinafter in sections 559b to 559f of this
title referred to as the"Secretary") to take actions necessary, in
connection with the administration and use of the National Forest
System, to prevent the manufacture, distribution, or dispensing of
marijuana and other controlled substances.
(b) Law enforcement authority
Nothing in sections 559b to 559f of this title shall diminish in any
way the law enforcement authority of the Forest Service.
(c) Definitions
As used in sections 559b to 559f of this title, the terms
"manufacture", "dispense", and "distribute" shall have the same
meaning given such terms in section802 of title 21.
(Pub. L. 99–570, title XV,§15002, Oct. 27, 1986, 100 Stat. 3207–191.)
References in Text
Sections 559b to 559f of this title, referred to in text, was in the
original "this title", meaning title XV of Pub. L. 99–570, Oct. 27,
1986, 100 Stat. 3207–191, known as the National Forest System Drug
Control Act of 1986, which enacted sections 559b to 559f of this
title, amended section 841 of Title 21, Food and Drugs, and enacted
provisions set out as a note below. For complete classification of
title XV to the Code, see Short Title note set out below and Tables.
Short Title
Section 15001 of title XV of Pub. L. 99–570 provided that: "This title
[enacting this section and sections 559c to 559f of this title and
amending section 841 of Title 21, Food and Drugs] may be cited as the
'National Forest System Drug Control Act of 1986'."
National Forest System, National Park System, and Bureau of Land
Management Public Lands Safety; Findings
Pub. L. 100–690, title VI,§6254(a), Nov. 18, 1988, 102 Stat. 4363,
provided that: "Congress finds that—
"(1) National Forest System lands continue to be a haven for
theunlawful production of marijuana and other controlled substances,
which—
"(A) endangers the publicin its use of National Forest Systemlands;
"(B) interferes with the ability of the Forest Service to effectively
manage the natural resources and activities within the National Forest
System; and
"(C) causes damage and destruction of the natural resourcesand
facilities managed by the Forest Service;
"(2) the unlawful production of marijuana and other controlled substances often—
"(A) is generally harmful to the environment and public healthand safety;
"(B) pollutes the air, soil,and water; and
"(C) is harmful to wildlife;
"(3) the Forest Service needsadditional authority to adequately deal
with the problem of controlled substance production that affects the
administration of the National Forest System;
"(4) the Forest Service needsto be able to exercise its investigative
authorities outside theboundaries of the National Forest System for
drug-related crimes arising from within the National Forest System in
order to be effective in deterring such crime;
"(5) the authority and powersof the Forest Service are not intended to
be in conflict or interfere with the statutory authority, powers, or
responsibilities of any State or political subdivision thereof; and
"(6) the Forest Service, in the exercise of its law enforcement
powers, should cooperate to every extent possible with any other
Federal, State, or local law enforcement authority having jurisdiction
in areas where national forests are located, particularly where
coordinated investigative andenforcement actions can be effective to
control crime which affects multiple agencies."

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