The Week Online with DRCNet, Issue #104 - August 20, 1999
   A Publication of the Drug Reform Coordination Network

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================

TABLE OF CONTENTS

1.  Household Survey Reports Decrease in Teen Use, While
    Overall Use Remains Flat
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#householdsurvey

2.  Superior Court of Guam Upholds Freedom of Religion for
    Rastafarian
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#makhana

3.  San Francisco Plans Methadone Expansion
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#sfmethadone

4.  Members of California Congressional Delegation Urge
    Governor to Sign Needle Exchange Bill
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#caldelegation

5.  ACLU Sues Oklahoma School District Over Student Drug
    Testing
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#oklahomasuit

6.  United Kingdom:  Liberal Democrat Leader Charles Kennedy
    Calls for Royal Commission on Drug Policy
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#ukcommission

7.  News in Brief
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#newsbriefs

8.  NORML Foundation Launches Marijuana Ad Campaign in San
    Francisco
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#adcampaign

9.  Lindesmith Center Seminar Series, Autumn 1999
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#seminars

10. Errata:  Methamphetamine Bill Alert, Kubby Plant Count
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#errata

11. EDITORIAL:  Governor Bush's Cocaine Problem
    http://www.drcnet.org/wol/104.html#editorial

================

1. Household Survey Reports Decrease in Teen Use, While
   Overall Use Remains Flat

Rob Stewart, Drug Policy Foundation, http://www.dpf.org

The Clinton administration announced on Wednesday that while
overall illegal drug use remained flat in 1998, past-month
teenage drug use went down.  White House drug policy
director Gen. Barry McCaffrey called the findings in the
1998 National Household Survey on Drug Abuse "good news
demonstrating that America's team effort is working.
However, we must not let our guard down."

Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala also
expressed overall optimism -- "it looks like we have turned
the corner" on teen drug use -- tempered with "we must not
rest."

McCaffrey's and Shalala's excitement was mainly generated by
the 13.1% drop in past-month (or current) use reported by
12-17 year olds, which went from 11.4% in 1997 to 9.9% in
1998, a statistically significant decrease.  Teens also
reported a significant decrease in the use of inhalants,
from 2.0% to 1.1%, and a non-significant decrease in
marijuana use, from 9.4% to 8.3%.  (In statistical terms,
"non-significant" means the data isn't strong enough to know
if the decrease is real or not.)

Although both officials cautioned that there were other
worrisome trends, such as increased use reported by 18-25
year olds, their tone was noticeably brighter than two years
ago when they announced another drop in teen use.  In August
1997, the NHSDA found that overall use by 12-17 year olds
fell 17.4%, from 10.9% in 1995 to 9.0% in 1996, which is
lower than the 1998 finding.  Yet, McCaffrey characterized
the change as a "_slight_ drop" [emphasis added].  The
Washington Post quoted Shalala on Aug. 7, 1997, as saying
that "drug use is still unacceptably high" and "we shouldn't
hang out the victory flag yet."  Those responses were more
realistic than Shalala's "turned-corner" phrase, which
implies that trends are turned around in one year.

Lynn Zimmer, a professor of sociology at CUNY Queens, told
the Week Online, "Drug use trends are always going to
fluctuate."  "I would expect," Zimmer added, "that [Shalala
and McCaffrey] are saying that we have 'turned the corner'
because they still have to go through the allocation process
for their media campaign, which went nationwide last year."

(The National Youth Anti-Drug Media Campaign is a joint
multimedia advertising effort by the White House Office of
National Drug Control Policy and the Partnership for a Drug-
Free America.  Even though the campaign plans on five years
of federal funding, ONDCP must ask Congress to approve money
for it every year.  Some Republicans in Congress have been
critical of the campaign, especially since ONCDP has not
concentrated the ads in states voting on policy reform
initiatives.)

Both the 1997 and 1998 Household Surveys include specific
results for Arizona and California using oversampled data.
Both states approved initiatives in 1996.  HHS added the
information "to measure the potential impact of these voter
initiatives."  The 1998 NHSDA found that, although
drug use reported by persons 12 and older in both Arizona
(7.4%) and California (7.2%) is higher than the national
average (6.1%), the differences are not statistically
significant.

Indeed, the survey found "significant decreases from 1997 to
1998 in the rate of illicit drug use among Arizona youth age
12-17 (from 16.8% to 13.4%) and young adults age 18-25 (from
21.8% to 17.2%)."  Californians age 12-17 reported no
significant change in marijuana use, which was 6.8% in 1997
and 7.4% in 1998.  "Rates for both youths and adults [in
California] have been stable since 1995," the survey said.

Select Results from the 1998 National Household Survey on
Drug Abuse (H-10):

 * an estimated 13.6 million Americans (6.2% of the
population age 12 or older) reported using an illegal drug
within the past 30 days in 1998.  Although this number is
slightly less than the 13.9 million estimate (6.4%) for
1997, the difference is not statistically significant.  By
comparison, 1979 was the highpoint for current use when the
estimate was 25.4 million (14.1%).

 * White, non-Hispanic respondents reported a non-
significant decrease in overall drug use from 6.4% to 6.1%,
but African Americans and Hispanics reported non-significant
increases from 7.5% to 8.2% and from 5.9% to 6.1%,
respectively.  The president of the National Center on
Addiction and Substance Abuse in New York told USA Today
(8/19) that both minority groups reported "whopping
increases in cocaine and heroin use," but the survey only
had racial/ethnic breakdowns for past-month cocaine use, not
heroin.  The data showed a statistically significant
increase reported by Hispanics (from 0.8% to 1.3%), but a
very slight decrease for African Americans (from 1.4% to
1.3%).

 * Between 1997 and 1998, there was no change in the
percentages of youths age 12-17 reporting great risk from
using cigarettes, marijuana, cocaine or alcohol.

The 1998 Household Survey is based on a sample of 25,500
people meant to represent the civilian, non-
institutionalized US population 12 years old and older.  The
survey is available from the Substance Abuse and Mental
Health Services Administration's website at
http://www.samhsa.gov or by calling (800) 729-6686.

================

2. Superior Court of Guam Upholds Freedom of Religion for\
   Rastafarian

Richard Milsom for DRCNet

If you have ever wondered what a strong interpretation of
the 'free exercise clause' of the First Amendment
guaranteeing freedom of religion might mean for the 'war on
drugs,' then you may be very interested in news of a legal
decision recently handed down in the US Territory of Guam.

On July 29, 1999, Judge Michael J. Bordallo of the Superior
Court of the United States Territory of Guam dismissed the
charge of 'Importation of a Controlled Substance' (a 'First
Degree Felony') originally lodged against Ras Iyah Ben
Makahna in 1991.

Mr. Makahna, a practicing Rastafarian, had asserted that the
marijuana that he had in his possession was essential to the
practice of his religion and, as such was included under the
freedom of religion protections of the United States
Constitution.

Guam's government attorneys have until August 27, 1999 to
declare whether or not they will appeal Judge Bordalla's
decision.

The legal ramifications of this case are complicated by the
fact that Guam, as a US Territory, is subject to provisions
of the 1899 Treaty of Peace which was enacted when Spain
ceded authority over Guam to the US after the Spanish-
American War.  In addition, as a territory, Guam's
relationship to federal statutes and Supreme Court decisions
is somewhat different than is the case for the 50 states.

Ras Iyah Ben Makahna's defense relied upon the First
Amendment of the US Constitution, the 1993 Religious Freedom
Restoration Act (RFRA), and Guam's own 'Organic Act' which
guarantees religious liberty to residents of the island
territory.

The Superior Court of Guam held that, due to legal factors
deriving from Guam's territorial status, the 1997 decision
of the Supreme Court that overturned RFRA (City of Boerne v.
Flores) was not binding in this case.

An extraordinary coalition of drug policy reform activists,
civil libertarians and members of a diverse collection of
religious communities worked for the passage of RFRA-which
was passed as an attempted response to the famous 1990
'peyote case' (Employment Division, State of Oregon v.
Smith).

Undoubtedly, this case will leave many freedom of religion
and drug policy reform activists throughout the United
States wondering 'what might have been' if RFRA had not been
overruled by the same court whose earlier action it sought
to counter.

The 'Guam case' of 1999 may also inspire some serious
thought about 'what might yet be' in terms of possible legal
protection of the religious use of currently outlawed plants
held sacred in certain religious communities.

The Superior Court of Guam is on the web at
<http://www.justice.gov.gu/superior/>.

Note:  Senate Bill 1428 would prohibit DRCNet from linking
to the sites below:

For information on the effects of the drug war upon
religious freedom in the US, visit
<http://www.erowid.org/freedom/religious/religious.shtml>.

Visit http://www.lycaeum.org and http://www.maps.org for
information about "entheogens" or the religious use of
substances.

================

3. San Francisco Plans Methadone Expansion

Taylor West, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

San Francisco took another step this week in efforts to
greatly expand access to methadone treatment for heroin
addicts.  Acting on a resolution passed by the San Francisco
Board of Supervisors in February 1998, a working group of
physicians, pharmacists, and methadone patients advised the
city to make methadone treatment more easily available by
allowing more doctors to prescribe the drug to addicted
patients.  Federal and local funds have been allocated to
study the feasibility of such a move.

Methadone is a synthetic narcotic that curbs heroin cravings
without causing the extreme highs and lows associated with
heroin use.  It has proven successful in helping addicts
stabilize their lives and end their heroin addictions
without suffering from severe withdrawal.  In San Francisco,
as in most of the country, methadone treatment is carried
out primarily through clinics, where patients must go daily
to receive their prescribed dose.

However, the San Francisco working group concluded that by
using only large scale methadone providers like clinics,
many heroin users are not getting the treatment they need.
The group's suggestions centered around adapting the
methadone treatment system to include more individual
doctors prescribing methadone and the cooperation of some
pharmacies in supplying the dosages.

Dr. Alice Gleghorn, Research Manager for the Community
Substance Abuse Services division of the San Francisco
Department of Health, explained the concept to the Week
Online.  "We're trying to expand treatment availability
across the board," he said.  "We're not talking about every
doctor in the city now being allowed to prescribe methadone.
We want to create a larger program for certifying
physicians, with training and education, and involve certain
pharmacies as well."  Gleghorn explained that many
individual doctors' offices do not have the facilities to
fill the daily distribution needs of methadone patients.
However, by allowing certified doctors to prescribe
methadone and involving pharmacies in the distribution
process, the system can be made more personalized and
accessible to the city's heroin users.

Support for expansion of methadone treatment has been
notably strong in San Francisco.  "We are the one city in
the country with a completely unified response to the
methadone system," Gleghorn said.  "Every [local government]
department has been very supportive.  We know how bad our
heroin problem is.  Thirty years of research has
demonstrated that methadone is one of the most effective
treatments for heroin addiction."

In the federal government, regulation of methadone programs
is in the process of changing over from the jurisdiction of
the Food and Drug Administration to that of the Center for
Substance Abuse Treatment.  Because the effects of this
changeover are uncertain, it is not clear how federal law
will relate to San Francisco's plans.  However, both
President Clinton and Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey have
expressed support for methadone treatment programs and a
dissatisfaction with the current methadone system.

Dr. Gleghorn emphasized the integrated nature of the city's
plans for its methadone program.  "This is simply one part
of San Francisco's efforts to provide treatment-on-demand to
our drug addicts.  No other city is making that as much of a
priority as we are.  This is another effort to improve
access to treatment, the choices, and the care available to
those addicted to drugs.  That is our overall strategic
goal."

Read our coverage of the federal government's proposed
changes to methadone regulations at
<http://www.drcnet.org/wol/101.html#methadoneregs>.

You can learn more about methadone maintenance treatment at
<http://www.drcnet.org/methadone>,
<http://www.lindesmith.org>, and <http://www.methadone.org>.

================

4. Members of California Congressional Delegation Urge
   Governor to Sign Needle Exchange Bill

Earlier this week, DRCNet sent an action alert to our
California subscribers, asking them to contact the
legislature in support of AB 518, a bill to provide clear,
legal protection to needle exchange programs operating with
the authorization of their localities.  AB 518 has passed
the Assembly, but Gov. Gray Davis has threatened to veto the
bill if it passes the Senate.

Yesterday, (8/19), Rep. Nancy Pelosi and 20 other members of
California's Congressional delegation sent a letter to
Davis, urging him to support and sign AB 518.  The letter
noted that "injection drug use is the primary source of
heterosexual, female and mother-to-newborn transmission of
HIV in California and the second leading cause of HIV
transmission among all Californians" and that "several
communities in California have established needle exchange
programs using emergency declarations," but that without
clear legal protection, "many localities in California will
not implement such lifesaving programs because of the
continued legal ambiguities."

Please call Gov. Davis at (916) 445-2841 and urge him to
support and sign AB 518.  If you are from California and
haven't contacted the legislature, please visit
http://www.drcnet.org/nepaction/ to send an e-mail or fax
and look up your state senator's phone number.

According to the San Francisco AIDS Foundation, the bill is
set to be heard on the Senate floor on Thursday, 8/26, some
law enforcement groups have been lobbying hard against the
bill, and some Democratic members who were expected to vote
for the bill now appear shaky.  So, please also call the
following senators:

Senator Betty Karnette (D-Long Beach/Cerritos/Artesia/
Rolling Hills)
        Capitol Phone: (916) 445-6447
        Capitol office staff: Charles Wright or Chris White
        District phone: (562) 997-0794

Senator Adam Schiff (D-Burbank/Glendale/Pasadena)
        Capitol phone: (916) 445-5976
        Capitol office staff: Carlos Machado
        District phone: (626) 683-0282

Senator Joe Dunn (D-Orange County/Santa Ana/Anaheim/Garden
Grove)
        Capitol phone: (916)445-5831
        Capitol office Staff: Elena Lopez
        District phone: (714) 705-1580

Senator Joe Baca (D-San Bernardino/Ontario/Pomona)
        Capitol phone: (916) 445-6868
        Capitol office staff: Barbie Beard or Manny Hernandez
        District phone: (909) 885-2222

Senator Jim Costa (D-Fresno)
        Capitol phone: (916) 445-4641
        Capitol office staff: Stephanie
        District phone: (209) 264-3078 or (805) 323-0442

In addition to these members, two other Democrats that are
expected to vote against the bill based on their previous
voting record on needle exchange are Senators Steve Peace
(San Diego) and Jack O'Connell (Santa Barbara/San Luis
Obispo/Ventura).  However, it would still be good for them
to hear from people in their districts:

Senator Steve Peace (D-San Diego)
        Capitol phone: (916) 445-6767
        Capitol office staff: Lucy Camarillo or Sally An Romo
        District phone: (619) 463-0243 or (619) 427-7080

Senator Jack O'Connell (D-San Luis Obispo/Santa Barbara)
        Capitol phone: (916) 445-5405
        Capitol office staff: Traci Verardo
        District phone: (805) 966-2296 or (805) 547-1800

Finally, one Republican who is expected to vote for the bill
is Senator Bruce McPherson from Santa Cruz/Santa Clara/
Salinas.  Calls from constituents thanking him for his
likely support would be helpful.  His district office
numbers are (831) 425-0401 and (831) 753-6386.

================

5. ACLU Sues Oklahoma School District Over Student Drug
   Testing

(courtesy NORML Foundation, http://www.norml.org)

The American Civil Liberties Union has filed a complaint
against a rural Oklahoma school district that administers
drug tests to all students who wish to participate in
extracurricular activities.

Other school districts have employed mandatory drug-testing,
but many of the activities in the Tecumseh School District
are tied to the student's classes.  Students who refuse to
submit to the urine test for the activity would then be
forced to drop the associated class, thus losing credits
for graduation.

The ACLU contends this is a violation of a student's right
to a public education, as well as the Fourth Amendment
protection against unreasonable search and seizure.

"First, schools wanted to test student athletes, then it was
students in extracurricular activities, and now it's
students competing in quiz bowls and performing in chorus,
where does it end?" said Graham Boyd, Director of the ACLU's
Drug Policy Litigation Project.  "The district's drug
testing policy is more about symbolism than substance.
Tecumseh officials initiated urine testing without any
evidence of a drug problem at the school and at a time when
government reports show that teen drug use is on the decline
nationally."

The ACLU's complaint is available online at
<http://www.aclu.org/court/tecumseh.html>.

================

6. United Kingdom:  Liberal Democrat Leader Charles Kennedy
   Calls for Royal Commission on Drug Policy

Kerie Sprenger for DRCNet

In a bold move, the new leader of Britain's Liberal Democrat
party, Charles Kennedy, broke ranks with the government's
hard-line position on drug policy, calling for a royal
commission to examine the matter.  Mr. Kennedy is of the
opinion that the time has come for an in-depth examination
and debate of drug policy in the United Kingdom, with
emphasis on education, differences in sentencing across the
nation, and enforcement issues.  He would like to include
the voices of many experts, including police officers, many
of whom believe that the war on drugs is a complete failure.
Kennedy stops short, however, of backing legalization, even
of decriminalization of marijuana for medical purposes.

That a British politician is calling for an examination of
the drug laws is nothing new, as one journalist likened the
debate to a yearly ritual much like the summer cricket.
What is new is that party leadership is taking this
position.  The Liberal Democrats are Britain's third-largest
political party.  Under Paddy Ashdown, the former party
head, the Lib Dem's enlightened position on drug policy was
downplayed, for fears the party's credibility might be
damaged.  Kennedy, who was elected to his position just over
a week ago, has caused a minor uproar in government by
taking this stance.  Ann Widdecombe, the Tory Shadow Home
Secretary, told The Guardian newspaper, "Charles Kennedy
clearly has yet to learn how a responsible party leader
should behave."

Both of the major political parties in Britain, the Tories
and Labour, have a "just-say-no" outlook on drug policy.
Kennedy is trying to bring reality to the table, by opening
an honest debate.  He would like to reconnect non-voters
with the political system by bringing to the fore the issues
that are affecting the average person.  His spokeswoman told
the Week Online that the Liberal Democrat party had always
planned on calling for a royal commission once they had
sufficient political voice, and had adopted this position in
a party conference a number of years ago.  "Mr. Kennedy
feels that the issue should be dealt with in a mature
debate.  Discussions on the matter have long been
repressed," she said.

Paul Matthews, a Home Office spokesman, gave the Week Online
the official government position.  "There are no plans for a
Royal Commission, as it would be of no real value," he said.
"The Advisory Council on the Misuse of Drugs is a statutory
body that already handles drug policy in the UK.  The
government s position is clear: there are no plans to
decriminalize marijuana for recreational use."

Matthews went on to say that marijuana as medicine would be
treated no differently than any other licensed drug in the
UK.  After it has gone through clinical trials, and its
safety, efficacy and quality is tested, marijuana can go
through channels like any other drug.  A license to grow
marijuana as medicine for clinical trials has been issued to
GW Pharmaceuticals, and trials are expected to commence in
the near future.  This will be the first major trial of
marijuana as medicine in the United Kingdom, though 20 other
licenses have been granted over the years for academic and
therapeutic study.

Danny Kushlick of Transform, a British drug policy reform
group, believes that the next election will have a positive
effect on the UK s drug policy, as the Liberal Democrats are
expected to take several seats that went Labour's way in the
last election.  "It looks hopeful," he said.  "The Lib Dems
shouldn't experience too much outside [US] pressure on this
issue, as they are in the third place politically."  The two
major political parties in Britain apparently feel
considerable pressure to follow American drug policy that
the Liberal Democrats, being a lesser, though up-and-coming
power, have yet to experience.  Mr. Kennedy's spokeswoman,
when asked if Mr. Kennedy was concerned about pressure from
the US State Department, told the Week Online, "We don't
really worry about things like that."

It remains to be seen whether Mr. Kennedy's call will be
heeded.

Please visit Transform on the web at
<http://www.transformuk.freeserve.co.uk>.

================

7. News in Brief

Jane Tseng, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Hawaii:  Impeachment Petition Filed against Mayor in
Eradication Scandal

A group of marijuana advocates in Hilo, Hawaii has filed an
impeachment suit against Mayor Stephen Yamashiro and six
county council members.  The lawsuit claims that the
officials violated the county charter by failing to conduct
a mandatory program review of the marijuana eradication
program "Green Harvest" and that the "special study" that
was ordered on the program in 1996 was inadequate.  The
impeachment petition included in the lawsuit charges
Yamashiro and the council members with denying justice,
destroying domestic tranquility, and creating more crime and
hard drug use when they supported the "Green Harvest"
program.  Yamashiro said he is considering resignation as an
alternative to spending the estimated $30,000 dollars it
would cost to defend himself against the suit.  Other
officials have said the charges do not concern them.

Michigan:  Six Police Officers Indicted on Drug and Civil
Rights Violations

Six Detroit police officers were indicted by a federal grand
jury this Tuesday (8/13) on drug and civil rights
violations.  The officers are charged with beating and
robbing people in their precinct, and hoarding drugs, money,
and guns from illegal searches of drug houses.  Three of the
six officers are also charged with taking bribes, possessing
drugs and drug paraphernalia, and protecting drug dealers.
If convicted, the officers face a maximum of 10 years in
prison and/or fines of up to $250,000.  The officers charged
with conspiracy to distribute face an additional maximum of
20 years in prison and/or fine of up to $1 million.  Over
two dozen police officers in Detroit have been charged with
corruption in the last two years.

"Drug Czar" Unlikely to Drink "Bong Water"

"Bong Water" is a new tool in the war against drugs -- at
least according to entrepreneur Ira Scott.  Real Things
Distributing, of which Scott is the CEO, recently developed
"Bong Water," a carbonated citrus drink.  Advertised under
the slogan "Stoned to the Bone," Bong Water is distributed
in 12 ounce bottles and comes in flavors like Ganja Grape,
Banana Spliff, Original Chronic, Sensimilla, and Ripped
Raspberry.  When asked about his product and its association
with drug use, Scott said that he is against drugs and is
"pleased to offer Bong Water as a cool and satisfying
alternative to underage drinking or participating in the
drug culture."

But when Scott issued a press release associating Bong Water
with the anti-drug efforts of Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey, the
General's office was not amused.  A spokesman told The
Washington Post that Scott had not been given permission to
use Barry McCaffrey's name and suggested that Scott's
product makes light of drug paraphernalia and drug use.
Bong Water is now available in Indiana and Chicago.

================

8. NORML Foundation Launches Marijuana Ad Campaign in San
   Francisco

(press release from the NORML Foundation)

A public advertising campaign launched in San Francisco by
the NORML Foundation urges that the government "stop
arresting responsible pot smokers."

The 30 billboards located on San Francisco bus shelters bear
one of two headlines: "Honk, if you Inhale," and "A Pot
Smoker is Busted Every 45 Seconds -- and You Wonder Why
We're Paranoid."  The ads direct readers to the NORML
Foundation's toll free number and to its web site
(http://www.norml.org).

"Around 12 million adult Americans smoke pot regularly in
their homes and still hold down demanding jobs, raise
families and lead productive lives," said Keith Stroup,
NORML Executive Director.  "We're calling on those
individuals to send a message to the state and federal
governments -- responsible marijuana use by adults is
commonplace, safe and should be decriminalized."

For more information, please contact NORML at (202) 483-
5500.  The ads can be viewed online at
<http://www.norml.org/about/ads.shtml>.

================

9. Lindesmith Center Seminar Series, Autumn 1999

Wednesday, 9/9, 11:00am-1:00pm (*lunch briefing, note time)
Opiate Overdose Deaths:  Lessons from Australia
Wayne D. Hall, PhD, executive director, National Drug and
Alcohol Research Center, University of New South Wales,
analyzes recent trends in opiate overdose fatalities in
Australia. Hall, professor of alcohol and drug studies,
explores a range of initiatives for reducing death rates.

Thursday, 10/7, 4:00-6:00pm
The War on Drugs:  From Jim Crow to Mary Jane
Graham Boyd, JD, director, American Civil Liberties Union
National Drug Policy Litigation Project, Reginald T.
Shuford, JD, staff attorney, American Civil Liberties Union,
and Esmerelda Simmons, JD, director, Center for Law and
Public Policy, Medgar Evers College, survey racial
disparities arising from drug prohibition.  Boyd provides an
historical overview of the impact of drug prohibition on
African-Americans.  Shuford analyzes the issues of "driving
while black" and racial profiling.  Simmons examines the
Rockefeller drug laws, with particular attention to the
effects of mandatory sentencing upon African-Americans in
New York.

Thursday, 10/21, 4:00-6:00pm
Drug Policy Reform 2000:  Opportunities and Challenges
Ethan Nadelmann, JD, PhD, director, The Lindesmith Center,
examines recent drug policy developments in the United
States and abroad, focusing on there implications for
overall drug policy reform strategy.

Tuesday, 11/2, 4:00-6:00pm
Preventing and Managing Binge Drinking in College Students:
A Harm Reduction Approach
G. Alan Marlatt, PhD, professor of psychology and director,
Addictive Behaviors Research Center, University of
Washington in Seattle, analyzes trends in alcohol
consumption among college students, based on research funded
by the National Institute of Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism.
Marlatt, editor of Harm Reduction: Pragmatic Strategies for
Managing High Risk Behaviors (Guilford Press, 1998), offers
techniques for managing and preventing alcohol-related
harms.

Thursday, 11/18, 4:00-6:00pm
The "Pharmaceuticalization" of Marijuana
Lester Grinspoon, MD, associate professor of psychiatry,
Harvard Medical School, examines the Institute of Medicine's
1999 report on medical marijuana.  Grinspoon, co-author of
Marijuana, the Forbidden Medicine (revised edition, Yale
University Press, 1997), critiques efforts to equate
marijuana with pharmaceutical drugs.

Seminars are held at the Open Society Institute, New York,
NY, 400 West 59th Street (between 9th and 10th Avenues).
Please RSVP to The Lindesmith Center at (212) 548-0695, fax:
(212) 548-4670, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

================

10. Errata:  Methamphetamine Bill Alert, Kubby Plant Count

In last week's issue, the article "Methamphetamine Bill
Contains Anti-Free-Speech Legislation"
(http://www.drcnet.org/wol/103.html#methbill), incorrectly
identified Senator Gordon Smith as an independent from New
Hampshire.  In actuality, Gordon Smith is a Republican from
Oregon; it is Bob Smith who is the Senator from New
Hampshire.  Gordon Smith is the cosponsor of this bill.
DRCNet regrets the error.

The August 5 NORML Foundation article that we reprinted, "
Kubby Case Begins in California, Interpretation of Prop. 215
at Issue," stated that a drug task forced had seized 360
plants from the home of Steve and Michele Kubby.  That
number was an initial, incorrect charge by police, which was
subsequently revised downward to 260 plants.  The Kubby's
intend to show that half of those plants were not viable.

================

11. EDITORIAL:  Governor Bush's Cocaine Problem

Adam J. Smith, Associate Director, [EMAIL PROTECTED]

First he refused to confirm or deny it.  Later he would say
only that "when I was young and irresponsible, I was young
and irresponsible."  Next he said that the issue wasn't
relevant.  Then he said that he wouldn't address "rumors."
Then he said that he could pass a standard security check
dating back seven years.  Finally, he said that he could've
passed the security check in his father's White House --
fifteen years.  Though he had to think before specifying
whether he could've passed it then or now.  Now, no matter
what he says, the issue seems destined to dog him until the
day he comes clean.

Texas Governor and Republican presidential frontrunner
George W. Bush, Jr. has a cocaine problem.

Under normal circumstances, an individual's past drug use,
especially if that use occurred in the distant past, should
not be relevant to their qualifications for present
employment.  But in the race for the United States
Presidency, it is relevant on two counts.  In fact, in
Governor Bush's case, it is relevant on three.

As governor of Texas, George W. Bush, Jr. supported and
signed legislation increasing penalties for drug possession
in that state.  In one instance, Governor Bush signed
legislation mandating jail time for people caught with less
than a single gram of cocaine.  As a candidate, Bush's
handling of the cocaine question offers clues as to how he
deals with embarrassing mistakes -- admit them and move on,
or obfuscate and side-step.  As President, Governor Bush
would preside over a national drug policy that is
increasingly punitive, the driving force behind the Nation's
ascendancy to the title of world's most prolific
incarcerator.

In 1992, Republicans asked whether Democratic candidate Bill
Clinton could summon the moral authority to send young
people to war, given the fact that he had successfully
avoided military service during his youth.  Today, Governor
Bush must be asked whether he can summon the moral authority
to send young people to prison, given the fact that he had
avoided the DEA in his youth.

It is becoming increasingly clear that George Junior most
likely did toot a line or two back in his halcyon days.  The
relevant question, then, is whether or not he believes that
five or ten years in prison would have been the appropriate
societal response to that use.  And if not, why he believes
that such treatment is appropriate for the children of
fathers who were not Ambassadors to China, Directors of the
CIA, Vice Presidents or Commanders-in-Chief.

The truth is that George Junior was never in much danger of
being treated like less fortunate Americans who get sucked
into our runaway criminal justice system.  As the rich son
of a powerful man, it is unlikely that he would have been
pulled over, searched, or busted in a street sweep.  Rich
people don't buy their coke on the street, in quarter gram
increments.  And if by some strange confluence of events he
had been caught and arrested -- rather than sent on his way
with a wave of his ID -- he would have certainly had an
expensive attorney, and a spot waiting for him at the Betty
Ford Clinic.  The judge would likely have wished him well in
his recovery.  It would've taken an act of God or else an
act of monumental stupidity on his own part for George
Junior to have ever seen the inside of an American prison
for drug possession.

But now he's running for president.  And the questions keep
coming.  And his answers keep changing.  And try as he might
to create a statute of limitations for questions about his
personal life, there is no such statute for hypocrisy.
Sending people to prison, increasing their sentences by the
stroke of his pen for the very behavior that he now claims
is irrelevant in his own history, does not speak well for
the honor or the conscience of the man.  George W. Bush Jr.
has a cocaine problem.  But he's got a big lead in the
polls, and more than thirty million dollars in the bank.
He'll suffer an awful long time before he hits bottom.
Right now, pathetic as it is to watch, his evasive
machinations in the face of confrontation can only mean one
thing.  He's still in denial.

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