Pubdate: [Fri, 01 Nov 1996] Source: Spokesman-Review, Spokane (WA) Author: Johanna Wools Reading Doonesbury lately about the marijuana for medical use leaves me caught between tears and laughter. This valuable medicine was taken from us in 1937 in a convoluted bill masked as a tax act. The American Medical Association opposed it strongly in brief sub-committee hearings. Only two questions were asked on the House floor: "What is this bill about?" The answer given by speaker of the House, Sam Rayburn, "I don't know -- it's about something called marijuana -- I think it's a narcotic or something." And, "What is the AMA's position?" The answer given by one of the sub-committee members [who later became a Supreme Court Justice] was, "They're behind us 100 percent." Today, legitimate access to medical marijuana is still prohibited by law. If it works to relieve any suffering and a doctor prescribes it, it is still denied. What right does the federal government have to make such decisions? At least in California, voters had a chance to express their views on a ballot; Washington voters should, too. Sincerely, Johanna Wools Grand Coulee