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- From: carlolsen@dsmnet.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,alt.drugs,talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: NORML's new look
- Date: Sun, 4 Dec 1994 10:23:37
- Message-ID: <carlolsen.951.000A650F@dsmnet.com>
-
- NORML's new look:
- Tie-dyes out, suits in
-
- By Dennis Cauchon
- USA TODAY
-
- In an effort to shed its image as a fringe group, the National
- Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws has recruited an
- all-star group of scientists -- including a Nobel Prize winner --
- for its board.
- NORML hopes the move to the mainstream will restore the
- influence the group had in the 1970s.
- "This board will get people to take the issue seriously, which
- is our biggest problem," says Richard Cowan, NORML's national
- director.
- The new board was recruited only after a bitter fight in NORML
- that often pitted mainstream members against counterculture
- activists.
- "The people in suits have taken over. The tie-dyes aren't
- welcome anymore," complains dissident Jeanne Lange, who was
- forced off the board. "They're mainstreaming a counterculture
- group and that's a tragedy."
- On the new board:
- * Kary Mullis, who won the 1993 Nobel Prize in chemistry.
- * Harvard Medical School professor Lester Grinspoon, author of
- Marijuana: The Forbidden Medicine.
- * Louis Lasagna, dean of Sackler School of Biomedical Sciences
- at Tufts University and chairman of the National Academy of
- Sciences committee that studied marijuana.
- * Ann Druyan, secretary of the Federation of American
- Scientists and co-producer, with husband Carl Sagan, of the PBS
- series Cosmos.
- * Medical professor John Morgan, author of the drug-abuse
- section in the Merck Manual of Diagnosis and Therapy.
- New York University medical professor Gabriel Nahas, a NORML
- opponent, says the board has impressive names, but "none of these
- scientists have done any work on the clinical effect of
- marijuana."
- Says physician Eric Voth, another outspoken NORML critic:
- "These are prestigious individuals, but they are not experts on
- drug abuse or the drug issue."
- Mullis, for example, won the Nobel Prize for inventing a quick
- and accurate way to replicate DNA. His discovery -- called a PCR
- test -- will be used in the O.J. Simpson case. It also allows
- scientists to find genes that cause disease and trace human
- evolution.
- Cowan dismisses the criticism, saying several of the
- scientists have written extensively on marijuana.
- "It's irrelevant anyway," he says. "Were selling freedom, not
- marijuana. We're trying to stop 400,000 arrests each year, not
- tell people to smoke pot."
- Cowan, 54, a libertarian oil man from Texas, has reshaped
- NORML over the last two years. When he took over, NORML was down
- to one employee, heavily in debt and in trouble with the Internal
- Revenue Service.
- NORML now has eight employees. Its annual budget has doubled
- to $400,000 and paid membership has tripled to 6,000. A tax
- lawyer and accountant help with the books.
- But Cowan, a Yale-educated friend of conservative writer
- William Buckley, rubbed some members of the board the wrong way.
- They accused him of mismanagement in July and tried to take
- control of the group's daily finances.
- Cowan supporters prevailed.
- "Dick Cowan is the best thing to happen to NORML in a long
- time," says Grinspoon, the Harvard professor who led the effort
- to recruit the new board. "The idiots before him had nearly
- destroyed NORML."
- Grinspoon says the scientists were enthusiastic about joining
- a new NORML board.
- Drug war advocates "like to perpetuate the idea that being on
- the NORML board is something nasty, a mark of shame," Grinspoon
- says. "That's ridiculous. The group's reputation has sunk, but
- we're going to elevate, and picking these people for the board is
- a good start.
- USA TODAY, Friday, November 25, 1994, page 7A.
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