Pubdate: Wed, 19 Feb 1997 Source: Spokesman-Review, Spokane (WA) Author: Tom Hawkins The New England Journal of Medicine's call to grant marijuana legitimate status as one of the nation's approved pharmaceuticals marks a giant step in the right direction for American drug policy. Instead of resisting the idea, the Clinton administration ought to embrace it as a safe and sane solution to the dilemma posed by Drug War posturing. Marijuana should be taken from the list of Schedule I substances that doctors are banned from prescribing or even experimenting with. Instead, it should be listed as a Schedule II controlled drug that may be legally administered to relieve pain and suffering. After all, the Federal Institute of Drug Abuse has it's very own research marijuana field somewhere in Mississippi. By the time Reagan took office, there were 25 people in the FDA's compassionate use program and the government was, and still is, engaged in harvesting cannabis and shipping it off to a former tobacco plant in North Carolina. There it is processed into cigarettes and mailed off to doctors who distribute the pot to patients. So for 25 years now, the government has been supplying pot to people for use as medicine. And for 25 years the FDA's official classification of the drug reads - "Medical Uses: None." Cocaine, on the other hand, is listed a "local anesthetic" and the equally addictive morphine as an "analgesic." This classification policy makes about as much sense as the denial of painkilling narcotic drugs to the terminally ill for fear they might become addicted. If people were treated properly for pain there wouldn't be a need for Dr. Jack Kevorkian. Tom Hawkins Grand Coulee, WA