Pubdate: Mon, 28 Mar 2005 Source: Daily Camera (CO) Copyright: 2005 The Daily Camera. Contact: http://www.thedailycamera.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/103 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?420 (Cannabis - Popular) STUDENTS WANT POT PENALTIES REDUCED FORT COLLINS (AP) -- Students at Colorado State University and the University of Colorado are urging administrators to lighten up on enforcement of marijuana laws because they say it's less harmful than alcohol. Both universities have suffered student deaths this school year as a result of alcohol poisoning. Student activists argue that penalties for smoking marijuana should be no stiffer than those imposed for underage drinking. Last week students signed petitions to put a marijuana referendum on the ballot for next month's student elections. Both votes would be nonbinding, and possession or use of marijuana would remain a crime. The marijuana referendum is being promoted by a group calling itself SAFER, for Safer Alternatives for Enjoyable Recreation. "If a fraternity told a freshman to go into the woods and smoke a pound of pot, he is not going to die from that," said Mason Tvert, a recent University of Virginia graduate. "He'll fall asleep before that happens." Boulder-based SAFER was formed in January as a nonprofit and plans to create chapters at CU and CSU. The group, which is heading up the petition drive to get the marijuana measure before student voters, said it hoped to have the required 2,085 signatures at CSU by today and had already obtained the necessary 1,200 at CU.