Pubdate: Thu, 21 Apr 2011 Source: Daily, The (U of WA, Edu) Copyright: 2011 The Daily Contact: http://dailyuw.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1254 Author: Kaitlin Gillespie COUGS PROTEST POT PROHIBITION April 20 Is Valued in Cannabis Culture, and the Protest Served As a Way to Gather in Celebration. About 30 students gathered on the sky bridge between the Lighty Student Services Building and the Glenn Terrell Mall Wednesday. The smell of incense filled the air as students gathered with signs reading "Cannabis is safer than alcohol," "I love pot" and "End marijuana prohibition." Members of the WSU chapter of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML) and Students for Sensible Drug Policy (SSDP) met Wednesday to march from Lighty to Reaney Park. Claude Laude, junior philosophy major and president of WSU NORML, said the club has grown from about five members to 100 in the last year. Laude, who is also a chair for SSDP, said the group originally started as a chapter of Sensible Washington, another group dedicated to reforming cannabis laws. He said April 20 is a day revered in cannabis culture, and the group saw it as a good reason to celebrate. "We just want to try to make sure that students around here know that marijuana prohibition is a serious thing, and we can't take it as a joke," he said. Alex Fortune, chief financial officer of NORML, said the main point of the protest was to socialize and gather members. The group wanted to discuss marijuana issues and have the opportunity to meet with each other. "It's just a nice thing to get people out, kind of supporting and showing their support for it and not kind of hiding out," he said. Sophomore philosophy major Andrew Jacobs said he thinks marijuana use should not be discouraged. "It's a matter of personal freedom rather than having all of these other things that are encouraged in society," he said. "There's this one thing that's for some reason so taboo." The group gathered in Reaney Park to celebrate with hot dogs, Frisbee and socializing. On Tuesday and Wednesday, the two groups gathered in the Compton Union Building to make signs and gather signatures for a petition for marijuana reform. Junior psychology major Brian Eggers said he supports legalization of marijuana. He participated in the march. "I feel it's great they're taking a stand for what they believe in, and I'll support anyone who takes a stand for what they believe in," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake