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- From: carlolsen@dsmnet.com (Carl E. Olsen)
- Newsgroups: alt.hemp,alt.drugs.pot,talk.politics.drugs,alt.hemp.politics,alt.drugs
- Subject: San Jose Mercury News 5/14/95
- Date: Sat, 27 May 1995 14:04:38
- Message-ID: <carlolsen.2129.000E1433@dsmnet.com>
-
- WEST / SAN JOSE MERCURY NEWS / MAY 14, 1995
-
- Marijuana is said to relieve the suffering of people with cancer,
- AIDS and other diseases. But are our drug laws Nipping
- Compassion in the Bud?
-
- Cover story: Reefer madness
- By Tracie Cone
-
- [picture]
-
- They are law-abiding citizens, but they or someone they love are
- suffering from grave illnesses, and pharmaceuticals don't ease
- the pain. So they come to places like the Cannabis Buyers Club.
- Above, Hazel Rodgers signs up a new patient, Danny O'Dell, who
- came from Texas.
-
- Reefer MADNESS
- Story by Tracie Cone
-
- Law-abiding regular folks descend into a netherworld to get
- relief for themselves or others with grave diseases. Why
- morphine and not marijuana?
-
- IT'S DUSK ON THE HIGHWAY, the time when the sun disappears and
- the dwindling light makes objects hard to discern. I see a car
- growing larger in my rearview mirror, but what's that on the
- roof? It registers: a police car-with lights and siren off for a
- sneak attack. My heart pounds so hard my throat hurts. I clutch
- my steering wheel with
- sweaty palms.
- I decide I've been under surveillance since I broke state and
- federal law 15 minutes earlier in Santa Cruz. My trunk holds
- marijuana amid golf clubs and dry cleaning. Who would buy the
- story that I'm taking it to a sick friend?
- Yet I am. She is waiting at home, her gut churning from her
- latest round of cancer treatment, and this is the substance she
- prays will finally bring relief. We had read of people who smoke
- marijuana to ease the nausea of chemotherapy. She decided to try
- it after her prescription medication caused near-deadly
- complications.
- The prospect of jail is viewed as just another indignity to
- people who are dying and will try anything to feel good again.
- When a life is at stake, the rule books often get chucked, no
- matter how law-abiding the person may be.
- "What have I got to lose?" she had asked.
- Near the Pajaro River, I poise my hand on my blink-
-
- POT
-
- er. Maybe a final act of traffic-law compliance will make the
- police go easy on me.
- The car rides my bumper for a second, then pulls to the left
- and darts past. It's only a Honda Accord with a ski rack on the
- top. I sigh at the trick played by my paranoid brain and drive
- home under the comforting cover of darkness.
-
- POSSESSING MARIJUANA makes criminals out people who use it to
- reverse the "wasting syndrome" of AIDS, relax spastic muscles,
- stifle epileptic seizures or ease the symptoms of a dozen other
- ailments. It is a misdemeanor in California to possess less than
- an ounce. People who deliver it to ailing friends are committing
- a felony.
- These users rarely fit the law-enforcement profile. They're
- not social misfits looking for a legal way to get high. It is
- not a "gateway" to the land of LSD and crack cocaine. They are
- simply doing what many sick people have done since ancient
- Egyptians smoked the leaves to cure headaches.
- Studies have shown that the THC in marijuana, along with some
- combination of its 460 known compounds, eases nausea in
- chemotherapy patients and reduces eye pressure in people
- suffering from blinding glaucoma.
- Yet the federal Government, spending billions in a popular war
- on drugs, halted all research that might prove whether the plant
- is more effective with some people than synthetic drugs on the
- market.
- It's absurd that medical decisions are being made by
- politicians," says Dr. Arnold Jeffe, a Santa Cruz physician.
- "It's so crazy that this has become such a big deal when, really,
- it's not a big deal at all."
- Politics made marijuana illegal in 1937 and politics might
- soon put it legally back in doctors' hands. San Jose Assemblyman
- John Vasconcellos has introduced a compassionate-use bill that
- would allow sick people to use marijuana.
- "If people are in pain they ought to be able to use marijuana
- to relieve their pain," Vasconcellos said. "It's none of the
- government's business in the first place."
- Should the bill fail, the San Francisco-based group
- Californians for Compassionate Use has hired a political
- consultant to get the issue on the November 1996 ballot.
- The proposition would make Californians the first in the
- country to decide a medical marijuana law, and the group -- AIDS
- activists skilled in the art of lobbying and sick people who
- depend on the drug -- believes the referendum has a chance.
- They are encouraged by a recent statewide survey they
- commissioned showing that while few Californians want to make
- marijuana legal, 66 percent of the 750 randomly questioned
- respondents would support a law allowing sick people to use it
- with a doctor's prescription.
- The law would turn Salinas retirees Dorothy
-
- 14 / MAY 14, 1995 / W E S T
-
- and Richard Haskell into law-abiding citizens again. They
- provide marijuana to their 44-year-old daughter, Vicki, who has
- liver cancer.
- "Umm, we just want it for, well, medicinal purposes," Dorothy
- Haskell said. "It breaks our hearts to see our daughter suffer."
-
- FOR 25 YEARS the medical marijuana battle has been waged politely
- by people with glaucoma and cancer. Now it is becoming the
- vocal, in-your-face fight of AIDS patients who say marijuana's
- appetite-inducing side effect keeps them from wasting away. AIDS
- activists just might succeed where others have not: They already
- have forced the Food and Drug Administration to make experimental
- drugs available years ahead of schedule.
- "I've been very conscious of the difference between AIDS
- patients and cancer and glaucoma patients," says Robert Randall
- of the non-profit Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics, based in
- Washington, D.C. "AIDS patients tend to be a part of a powerful,
- organized community of people who are suffering. They look out
- for each other."
- AIDS activists were a big part of successful marijuana
- referendums in San Francisco and Santa Cruz counties. Eighty
- percent of voters in San Francisco, and 77 percent in Santa Cruz,
- approved resolutions supporting the use of pot for medical
- reasons.
- Medical marijuana advocates want to modify a law that has been
- in place since 1970. That's when the FDA and Drug Enforcement
- Agency ruled that the peace movement's drug of choice is as
- useless to medical science as LSD and heroin. All three became
- classified as Schedule 1 narcotics -- drugs with no known medical
- use.
- Morphine, cocaine and even Marinol -- a synthetic derivative
- of marijuana's Delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC) -- are Schedule
- 2, which means doctors can prescribe them. Medical marijuana
- advocates argue that Marinol often doesn't work as well as the
- real thing -- especially in a vomiting patient -- and want the
- plant moved to Schedule 2.
- In April 300 people -- many sick or dying, on crutches and in
- wheelchairs, in suits and leather, Gray Panthers and gay
- activists -- gathered on the steps of the U.S. Federal Building
- in San Francisco to draw attention to the fight.
- "This is our Stonewall!" shouted referendum leader Dennis
- Peron, comparing the marijuana battle to New York's historic gay
- freedom struggle. "They are not going to drive us back into our
- closets. I think back to '65 when cops were dragging our friends
- to jail -- and now cops want to take AIDS patients to jail."
- With TV cameras rolling and tour buses creeping by, they dared
- the DEA to arrest them all.
- Martin Simmons, 32, scooted his wheelchair to the front of the
- crowd and screamed the chant:
- Racist, sexist, anti-gay
- DEA, go away.
- "I'm dying," Simmons, an AIDS patient, said afterward. "F---
- the law."
-
- RICHARD AND DOROTHY HASKELL are proof that need is the thing most
- likely to convince someone with anti-drug views to accept medical
- marijuana. My friend had never even seen marijuana.
- I often drove her to the hospital and witnessed the horrendous
- nausea she suffered after treatment. Prescription drugs were
- supposed to settle her stomach, but every day we stopped two or
- three times on the way home for her dry heaves to pass. At home,
- she vomited more. She lost the desire to eat and quickly dropped
- 15 pounds, which in turn made her too weak to withstand strong
- treatment.
- This is what cancer sufferers say about anti-nausea drugs such
- as Zofran (which costs $600 a dose) and Torecan: The side effects
- can be worse than the problems they're designed to prevent.
- Sometimes, it's a headache, stupor or insomnia. My friend's
- pharmaceutical, besides not curing her nausea, constipated her.
- In most people, that would be uncomfortable but not deadly.
- But doctors continued giving her the toxic chemical they hoped
- would kill her cancer cells, and it wasn't leaving her body. In
- the car beside me one evening, after a violent burst of dry
- heaves, she stopped breathing. I beat on her chest, screamed
- frantically and started CPR:
- "Please breathe. Come back. Please don't die."
- She didn't die, and later I told her about my aunt who had
- smoked pot while undergoing chemotherapy for liver cancer. My
- friend has a medicine cabinet full of painkillers, but had never
- tried an illegal drug. Now she was desperate.
- I asked friends about buying marijuana on the black market
- which, law enforcement should be happy to hear, doesn't seem as
- active as it was a decade ago. Instead I found the medical
- marijua-
-
- na underground.
-
- MY FIRST VISIT was with Scott Imler, who runs Citizens for
- Medical Marijuana in Santa Cruz.
- On the cramped top floor of an old downtown Victorian, Imler
- dispenses advice and marijuana to people he believes are sincere.
- It helps if they have a note from their doctor -- and almost all
- the patients Imler helps do. He keeps records on a computer, and
- a stash in the closet. He sent me home with a good supply of
- prime sinsemilla buds.
- Imler, 37, used to be a special education teacher. He grew
- pot in the late '80s to supply sick friends in San Francisco. In
- 1992, after sheriffs deputies seized his crop, he worked to pass
- the Santa Cruz County compassionate-use referendum.
- Dennis Peron of San Francisco sold marijuana in the 1960s and
- '70s as the drug culture thrived. In the late '80s he discovered
- a higher purpose for law-breaking when his lover, dying of AIDS,
- used marijuana to stimulate his appetite. Looking respectable
- with Gap clothes and a gray banker-style haircut, Peron now sells
- marijuana to sick people who can afford it, and gives it to those
- who can't at his Cannabis Buyers Club, an illegal reefer pharmacy
- in the city's Castro district.
- Peron founded the statewide referendum group earlier this year
- and counts on his buyers club members for support. One Friday in
- April, however, Peron abruptly closed the doors after he received
- a tip: The Drug Enforcement Agency would bust him that afternoon.
- He quickly organized the protest outside the Federal Building
- because customers were returning to dark Tenderloin street
- corners or Dolores Park to find supplies.
- "I haven't eaten in days, I can't sleep," Martin Simmons said.
- "I don't know what else to do."
- Valerie and Mike Corral of Davenport began growing marijuana
- 20 years ago, after reading that it could control Valerie's
- epileptic seizures. Now they grow enough to share with about a
- dozen people, all of them dying, who find them by word-of-mouth.
- With her bobbed hair, slacks and pumps, Valerie, 42, looks more
- Junior Leaguer than pot grower.
- Once a week at her mountaintop cabin, she hunches over a
- tattered "Joy of Cooking" and modifies the traditional Butter
- Thin cookie recipe. Using marijuana instead of flour, she
- produces a green cookie that will induce the same effect as
- smoked marijuana after it meanders through the digestive system.
- Santa Cruz County Sheriffs deputies have arrested Corral twice
- and destroyed her plants. Yet even the prospect of prison does
- not stop her.
- "There's not a person who could violate me more than a
- seizure, so I have no fear of cops," she says.
- May is planting time, and Valerie and Mike are preparing the
- greenhouse. They plant "Luther Burbank style," growing 100
- seedlings, but keeping only the five or six female plants that
- develop the bushy foliage they're looking for. They might net 15
- pounds in a season.
- "We've learned how to grow healthy plants and get a high
- yield," says Mike, who has collected seeds for 20 years. "It's
- genetics."
- One recipient of their pot is Bill Shanteau, 44, a Cabrillo
- College instructor who is in the final stages of colon cancer.
- He waits in bed for the weekly delivery that brings physical,
- psychological and psychokinetic relief. Yes, sometimes Shanteau
- just wants to get high.
- "The point is," Shanteau says, "marijuana is a major agent in
- keeping me interested in life. Besides restoring my appetite,
- it's like a hot tub for the brain. It stimulates me
- intellectually. It keeps me focused in the moment instead of me
- sitting here thinking I'm dying tomorrow. I hate to think what
- my life would be like right now if I didn't have it."
- Shanteau's desire to get high complicates the issue.
- Marijuana doesn't only ease nausea in sick people; it also makes
- them high. This troubles pot foes, who see the potential for
- abuse and distrust the motives of the people who are pushing
- medical marijuana. Last year in Sacramento, a woman publicly
- lashed out at Valerie Corral:
- "She said, 'You People just want to feel good,'" Corral
- recalls. "And I said, 'Yeah? So? What's the crime in a sick
- person wanting to feel good?'"
-
- TOM GORMAN OF SACRAMENTO cringes when people say anything good
- about marijuana. A member of the California Narcotics Officers
- Association, Gorman says that stories of medical miracles are
- propaganda from people who want to decriminalize drugs.
- "If you were dying of cancer," says the 27-year veteran of law
- enforcement, you'd probably grasp at anything. But smoking
- anything is not good for you. What we're doing in the '90s is
- the exact same thing we did in the '70s -- we're romanticizing
- drugs. Once you get a soft attitude, kids get the impression
- it's not so bad."
- Gov. Pete Wilson agrees. In 1994 he vetoed a medical
- marijuana bill passed by the Legislature. An aide says Wilson
- will veto the Vasconcellos bill if it lands on his desk.
- "The governor believes it would serve no useful purposes" says
- spokesman Jesus Arredondo, "when the FDA has already concluded
- that marijuana is not good."
- The California Medical Association says marijuana, used under
- a doctor's order, is often beneficial. The American Medical
- Association, the only group originally to speak against Congress'
- 1937 ban, has not taken a stand, but supports more research.
- The American Bar Association, the National Association of
- Attorneys General and the Conference of Episcopal Bishops are
- among the groups calling for the repeal of laws against medical
- marijuana. Legislators in 35 states, including California, have
- passed non-binding resolutions supporting its use.
- From the '40s through the '60s, as science refined
- pharmaceutical drugs, the medical community began thinking of
- herbs and botanical treatments as old-fashioned. But in the
- '70s, recreational users inadvertently discovered marijuana's
- value to modern medicine; researchers reported that cancer
- patients they had treated felt better after using the drug.
- Robert Randall of the Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics has
- glaucoma. In 1976, after a lawsuit and weeks of tests at the
- Jules Stein Eye Institute at UCLA, he became the first person in
- the United States to receive marijuana from the federal
- government. By then he was nearly blind and the tests showed
- that only marijuana -- not any prescription drug -- would lower
- his eye pressure and save his sight. The government, he says,
- had had that information since 1971.
- "The prospect that an easily grown plant can ease human
- suffering should be a cause for celebration," he says. "The
- problem is, we don't live in a sane society."
- Randall says he smokes pot every day. He still has limited
- eyesight.
- From 1978 to 1986, New Mexico health officials tested
- marijuana on cancer patients who were not helped by other anti-
- nausea treatment; 90 percent reported improvement. A study in
- New York showed that 78 percent of 56 cancer patients who didn't
- respond to other drugs felt better after smoking marijuana. The
- study, published in 1988, also tested the synthetic THC: One-
- third of the patients who did not feel better using it did show
- improvement after smoking marijuana.
- By 1991, the federal government, still denying marijuana's
- benefits, was shipping it to 12 people suffering from cancer
- nausea, glaucoma, chronic pain and muscle spasms associated with
- multiple sclerosis. Randall encouraged people with AIDS to
- apply, as he had, for an application to use an unproven drug. It
- was a program established by Jimmy Carter after Randall's case
- became public.
- Meanwhile, doctors began accepting the use of medical
- marijuana. A 1991 study by Rick Doblin, a Ph.D. candidate at
- Harvard's Kennedy School, found that 44 percent of the 1,000
- cancer specialists who responded to a nationwide survey have told
- patients that marijuana could relieve nausea. More than half of
- the oncologists surveyed said it should be available by
- prescription.
- Some doctors believe that not telling their patients is cruel.
- "I have patients who say that it helps them, and I recommend
- it to patients," says Dr. Leff, 53, of Santa Cruz, who was
- Cincinnati's Drug and Alcohol Abuse director in the early 1970s.
- "[Recommending marijuana] is not unusual. It's only a big deal
- to people with religious or moralistic views about the drug."
- The FDA, swamped with thousands of unproven drug applications,
- had approved about two dozen more patients by late 1991. But the
- Public Health Service under George Bush quietly stopped approving
- new participants and ended all marijuana research programs. The
- patients already approved but still waiting for marijuana were
- out of luck. Today the government provides marijuana to only
- eight of the original 12 patients. (The other four have died.)
- "There was a sense, with so many people applying, that we
- wouldn't have enough marijuana to provide," said Rayford Kytle of
- the PHS, which grows a small crop in Mississippi.
- The PHS supported the Bush administration decision by saying
- that smoking marijuana, like cigarettes, can cause lung cancer.
- The PHS further warned that smoking it can compromise immune
- systems already made fragile by AIDS or other diseases. And
- being under the influence can cause anxiety.
- Bill Clinton, who says he tried marijuana but didn't inhale,
- has upheld the ban. His administration added a provision,
- however, that allows research into medical benefits.
- Dr. Donald Abrams, assistant director of the AIDS project at
- San Francisco General Hospital, sought approval to study
- marijuana's effects on the wasting syndrome associated with AIDS.
- "The study would not only see whether it's effective, but whether
- it's harmful," Abrams says.
-
- W E S T / MAY 14, 1995 / 17
-
- POT
-
- He hoped to study 40 people -- too few to settle the marijuana
- question but enough to determine whether more research is
- warranted. He applied to the FDA, the DEA and a state agency
- that oversees California university research programs. The state
- approved the study and the FDA signed off after insisting on
- numerous chances. On April 15, 1994, Abrams crossed what he
- thought would be the final hurdle when he paid the DEA for a
- license to distribute a Schedule I drug. The DEA cashed the
- check, but has yet to approve the research.
- "Everything I hear is from unofficial channels," Abrams said.
- "They said they didn't trust my research, or they questioned my
- credibility. Nobody can give me a direct answer on why this is
- taking so long."
- A federal health official offered this reason: "It' s too
- volatile an issue with the anti-drug people. It's a shame they
- can't distinguish between a small group of medically needy people
- and drug abusers."
- Abrams' struggle has had an unfortunate side effect: It has
- discouraged others from applying.
- "Political pressure has demoralized researchers," Doblin says.
- "It has made it hard to get money for research. If Donald
- doesn't get permission, nobody is going to try."
- Few issues besides abortion produce such distrust between
- camps. Marijuana opponents say we can't say "no" to most drugs
- but "yes" to one. They say there are enough medications on the
- market to provide relief. Few politicians want to be viewed as
- being soft on drugs.
- The marijuana proponents counter that the government policy is
- set by pharmaceutical manufacturers who stand to lose billions of
- dollars in anti-nausea drug sales to a plant they cannot patent.
- Proponents say medical professionals not bureaucrats, should
- decide health-care issues.
- "They're probably right," says the federal health official,
- who asked for anonymity, "but until people convince their
- congressional representatives that the law needs to be changed,
- nothing will be done."
- In 1988, after two years of public hearings, the DEA's own
- chief administrative law judge said the drug agency should
- rewrite its marijuana policy.
- "It would be unreasonable, arbitrary and capricious for DEA to
- continue to stand between those sufferers and the benefit of this
- substance in light of the evidence of this record," Judge Francis
- L. Young said.
-
- MY FRIEND, who has never smoked a cigarette, didn't know how to
- inhale her marijuana. We made a pipe by rolling aluminum foil
- into a tube, then bending one end up slightly. We rolled some
- into joints.
- After smoking a few puffs, or eating one of Corral's cookies,
- my friend had little nausea. She could eat real food again.
- In four weeks she regained her weight. Her face was full, her
- cheeks pink. Her eyes, which often seemed dull and half closed,
- were open and bright. We drove home from the hospital without
- ever stopping again.
- "If the government wants to find out whether marijuana can
- stop cancer patients and AIDS sufferers from throwing up and
- losing weight -- put them on a scale," Randall says.
- Dorothy and Richard Haskell decided in March that breaking the
- law was preferable to watching Vicki suffer.
- "We were always anti-drug," Dorothy says. "It just wasn't the
- way we lived."
- Vicki's pain medication had stopped working. She couldn't
- sleep or keep food down. The Haskells read about medical
- marijuana but didn't know where to find any until they read an
- article in which Imler was quoted.
- When the Haskells stepped inside Imler's headquarters, they
- looked as if one more worry would break them. From the parlor
- wafted the click of typewriter keys as Ed Frey, attorney and
- former D.A. candidate, worked in his office. Imler gets free
- office space and a small salary to work as Frey's assistant. The
- couple stammered nervously.
- "Anyone who has ever had a child can tell you why we're here,"
- Dorothy said. "It breaks our hearts to see our daughter suffer."
- "I just want her to be able to sleep, she's in so much pain,"
- Richard said. "It's our daughter, so as far as I'm concerned,
- I'm not doing anything illegal."
- All day, Imler helps people like the Haskells, fields phone
- calls, teaches clients to grow pot for themselves, and solicits
- donations.
- "We have an uneasy accommodation with local law enforcement
- here," he says. "They know we're here, but so far we've been
- lucky."
- Politicians know the voters in Santa Cruz County believe sick
- people should be allowed marijuana if they want it. And Santa
- Cruz police say they are aware that medical marijuana proponents
- are active in town, but they are too busy to investigate the
- movement.
- "We don't have enough personnel to enjoy the luxury of sitting
- around and wondering what they're doing," says deputy police
- chief Jeff Locke. "But our feeling is still that it's against
- the law."
- In March, Imler received a letter from Dr. Stephen Stein,
- medical director of the County of Santa Cruz Health Services
- Agency, asking him to provide marijuana to an AIDS patient.
- "[The patient] reports using marijuana to treat symptoms of
- nausea and anorexia," Stein wrote. "I have no objection to him
- using it for this purpose."
- The local attitude makes District Attorney Art Danner wonder
- whether prosecuting a medical marijuana case would waste
- taxpayers money. That's part of the reason he has declined to
- prosecute Valerie Corral both times sheriffs deputies arrested
- her.
- A trial would cost thousands, and a loss would demoralize law
- enforcement.
- "Hers was a difficult case," he says. "I don't think I could
- get a jury to convict her. It's a difficult situation here. On
- the one hand, we have a lot of terminally ill people using it.
- On the other hand, we don't want everyone with a headache to use
- it."
- Danner, a member of the National Association of District
- Attorneys' Executive Committee, has asked the group to take up
- the issue at its annual convention in July.
- "I suggested we take a good look at the research and see
- whether it should be moved from the legal to medical
- jurisdiction," Danner says. "I got a lot of interest from other
- D.A.s whose constituents are talking to them about this issue.
- They were more interested than I thought they'd be."
- About the time the district attorneys meet, members of
- Californians for Compassionate Use will begin collecting the
- signatures of 433,000 registered voters. The drive is being
- conducted by Ken Masterton, a political consultant who qualified
- recent successful propositions protecting mountain lions and
- increasing the tobacco tax.
-
- THE HASKELLS were unaware of the various political movements when
- they visited Imler in March.
- To them, marijuana was a last resort; a trip to the downtown
- head shop for a pipe too strange to consider.
- "Uh, no, please, we can't go in there," Dorothy begged.
-
- continued on page 22
-
- POT
-
- continued from page 19
-
- Imler gave them joints instead of a pipe. Richard held the
- sealed envelope and folded it in half. He searched his pockets
- for a paper clip and nervously affixed the halves together. He
- put the package in his pocket and realized the group had been
- watching him fumble.
- "Oh, I don't know what I'm doing," he said.
- Before leaving for their own nerve-racked drive home, the
- Haskells gave Imler a $50 bill. It is a huge donation for a
- shoestring operation dependent upon the kindness of strangers.
- Timing was good. Donations of pot and money are off. Imler's
- stash has been of such bad quality lately that even home health-
- care nurses have called to complain.
- Back in Salinas, Vicki, who has two high school-age sons,
- attempted to try the marijuana. Stigma proved a powerful
- deterrent.
- "She didn't want to do it in front of her kids," Dorothy
- Haskell said. "She's back in the hospital now, trying to get her
- pain medication regulated. I don't think she gave it a chance
- because she thought it was really wrong. I even took a couple of
- puffs myself so she would think it was OK. If your child is
- involved, you'll do anything."
-
- IN MID-APRIL Vicki Haskell turned worse. After trying every pain
- medication prescribed by her doctor, she smoked the marijuana.
- After weeks of insomnia, she was able to sleep through the night.
- On April 12, Richard and Dorothy drove back to Santa Cruz to get
- more.
- "Every time someone like that leaves, I say, Now I know why
- we're here," Imler says.
- Dennis Peron reopened the buyers club a week after he closed
- it. Martin Simmons was among the 1,500 first-day customers.
- Peron hopes drug agents won't show, and the DEA's Mike Herald
- declined to confirm whether Peron is being investigated. If the
- DEA comes knocking, Peron threatens, agents will have to arrest
- all 4,000 members.
- "Tell the jail to stock up on catheters and medical
- equipment," he says. "The jail is going to be full of sick
- people.
- Randall says the marijuana fight reminds him of the struggles
- of Galileo, the 16th-century astronomer. Galileo saw craters on
- the moon, but the church replied the moon is perfect. Look
- through the telescope, Galileo implored. But the church said:
- No, it's an instrument of the devil.
- "On the one hand, I'm more optimistic now than I've ever
- been," Randall says. "AIDS patients have revitalized this
- movement around the world. Still, bureaucrats resist, even under
- overwhelming evidence they are destroying people's lives."
- And that, says Randall, is true reefer madness.
- My friend recently learned that she is cancer-free for the
- first time in a decade. Her doctor said part of the reason is
- that she kept on weight.
- "You kept your strength up," he told her, "which allowed you
- to withstand the high doses. I'm trying to determine what
- combination of chemicals may have caused that."
- She hopes that someday she will find the courage to tell him.
-
- TRACIE CONE is a staff writer for West.
-
-
-