Pubdate: Wed, 05 May 2010 Source: Oregonian, The (Portland, OR) Copyright: 2010 The Oregonian Contact: http://www.oregonlive.com/oregonian/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/324 Author: Anna Griffin Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) U.S. ATTORNEY'S LETTER TO REED COLLEGE FIRST STEP IN A MUCH-NEEDED DRUG EDUCATION College students experiment. They change hairstyles, majors, even sexual orientations. And at Reed College, as on most campuses, some experiment with illegal drugs. That's the way it's always been. Smart kids do dumb things to help figure out who they are. Which is why some students and alumni of the prestigious Southeast Portland school were taken aback last month when local prosecutors demanded that Reed adopt a "zero tolerance" approach to illegal drugs or risk losing federal funding. On the eve of Renn Fayre, the end-of-year celebration, Multnomah County District Attorney Mike Schrunk and U.S. Attorney Dwight Holton reminded Reedies that two of their own died recently from heroin overdoses. "There has been this two-tiered drug policy at Reed, with different standards for different drugs," Holton said. "The result is an unofficial legitimizing of all drug use." Here's the underlying truth: Nobody thinks drugs will disappear from campus. They'd just like the exceedingly intelligent people at Reed -- both students and administrators -- to do what a Reed education teaches: consider every angle and choose wisely. College guides note the easy access Reed students enjoy to marijuana and hallucinogens. Controlled mayhem is the name of the geeky game at Renn Fayre. Even the faculty handbook's section on drugs begins on a grudging note: "Drug and alcohol use is a complex and controversial topic. Many would argue that public policy on drug and alcohol use has been counterproductive, discouraging rational analysis of substance use, abuse and addiction..." Student leaders say the level of campus abuse has been overblown by Reed's countercultural rep and openness about drugs. "We've been portrayed as spoiled or out of control," said Celia Hassan, Reed's student body president. "The truth is that people here work very hard and earn a great deal of autonomy." I'm with Hassan on the broader point. If everyone on campus is a stoner, why do so many Reed graduates do so many great things? Yet I also get where prosecutors are coming from. Heroin is back. The folks who fight crime are desperate to avoid a meth-like epidemic of overdoses and violence. Reed students, generally more affluent and open to experimentation, are an appealing market for dealers. Administrators and students draw intellectual distinctions between marijuana and more serious narcotics - -- "Heroin is not condoned here, not at all," Hassan said. But prosecutors correctly note that one can lead to another, particularly when the door is already open to dealers. "If this were just a bunch of people smoking pot, we wouldn't be having this conversation," Holton said. "At the same time, an illegal drug is an illegal drug. That message has to be clear and unambiguous." Yet this situation is undeniably ambiguous, like the broader "war on drugs." Police don't have the time to arrest every Reedie with a joint. Administrators and alums rightly cherish Reed's reputation for intellectual exploration. Nobody wants an environment in which students who need help are too worried about legal consequences to seek it. The buttoned-down prosecutor and the student leader with a stud in her nose both circle around to the same basic answer: honest conversations between the card-carrying adults and the students who want to be treated that way. "Simply saying, 'Don't do drugs,' isn't going to work with our student body," Hassan said. "You need to take a more intellectual approach." "Discourse is the most effective path to change at Reed," Holton said. "In a sense, the letter was a way to get everyone's attention." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake