Pubdate: Thu, 27 Mar 2008 Source: Des Moines Register (IA) Copyright: 2008 The Des Moines Register. Contact: http://desmoinesregister.com Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/123 Author: Jacqueline Lee DRAKE DISCUSSION FOCUSES ON IMPROVING DRUG POLICY The war on drugs is prejudiced against minorities, a group of Drake University students and professors concluded Wednesday. "America's war on drugs has really turned into American's war on nonwhite youth," said Eric Johnson, an education professor at Drake. Johnson, three other Drake professors and a representative of Law Enforcement Against Prohibition formed the panel Wednesday evening on the Drake campus at a discussion hosted by Drake Students for Sensible Drug Policy. The group of about 50 students who attended tried to brainstorm a better drug policy, one that doesn't unfairly affect minorities and college-bound students, they said. But the panel and attendees did not settle on a solution. Some suggested legalizing all drugs, while others demanded equal punishment for similar offenses. Jennifer McCrickerd, a Drake philosophy and ethics professor, said, "If you make drugs legal in the United States, it will destroy the economies of developing nations." Alicia Cummins, 20, a sophomore at Drake, started Drake Students for Sensible Drug Policy in September because, she said, people she knows were hindered by a provision of the Higher Education Act that renders students with drug convictions ineligible for federal loans, grants and work-study programs. "For young people who want to go to school and want to make something of themselves, should a mistake really set them back for life?" Cummins asked. Cummins' organization is a chapter of the international Students for Sensible Drug Policy, a grass-roots network of students based in Washington, D.C. The international organization estimates that since 2000 nearly 200,000 students have been denied federal financial aid because of drug convictions. Some at Wednesday's discussion also questioned the rhetorical implications of calling the drug issue a war. "When we put everything in the context of a war, and you accept that there is a war on drugs, it moves our consciousness and our discourse in a certain direction," said Bill Lewis, a professor of rhetoric at Drake. - --- MAP posted-by: Derek