Pubdate: Wed, 26 Jan 2005 Source: Columbia Daily Tribune (MO) Copyright: 2005 Columbia Daily Tribune Contact: http://www.columbiatribune.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/91 Author: Mike Bellman Referenced: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v05/n113/a06.html STUDENT ATHLETES DON'T HAVE BRAINS TO HANDLE POT LAW Editor, the Tribune: As a Boone County resident who has never smoked marijuana, I agree with Sen. Chuck Gross of St. Charles. His proposed bill would help Columbia residents realize the importance of sending the right message to public schoolchildren: "You don't know any better!" While medical marijuana prescriptions are intended for adults and municipal possession laws apply to adults and not minors, the progressively minded Gross feels that's too risky. Student athletes must be stupid and impressionable. They get the wrong message about "legalized pot." Rumors abound, and what else is there to do for fun in Columbia? The ensuing mass of tourney-going pot smokers will send this town into a chaotic mass of children stricken with "Reefer Madness" not seen since the black days of the 1950s when the whole populace of children was driven insane smoking the wacky weed. At-large Missourians seem to hold such low regard for the "sickies" to keep their youngsters away. How righteous the mighty live as to look at their pale, lifeless faces and say "Nay, you may not toke upon these joints and pollute the young minds of student athletes." These children are impressionable and cannot tell the difference between "hits" and "hits." Missouri's standard of "proficiency" for MAP testing is less than 50 percent. There is no standard of proficiency for the DARE program. It is a brave move to suggest that fewer than half of the high school athletes would not know the difference between recreational pot and terminal cancer. Mike Bellman - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake