Source: Bulletin, The (OR) Contact: http://www.bendbulletin.com Pubdate: 18 Sep 1998 Mail: Bend Bulletin, 1526 NW Hill St., Bend, OR., 97701 Page: A-4 Section: Editorial NO ON MEARSURE 67 Supporters of Measure 67, which would legalize marijuana for medicinal use, are fond of repeating the morphine analogy. It goes something like this: Doctors can prescribe morphine to people in pain, so why can't they prescribe marijuana to those with severe nausea and emacipation, which pot use is reputed to alleviate? This analogy, we suspect, makes more and more sense with each hit of the hookah. Marijuana would not be prescribed under Measure 67. Rather, doctors would be permitted to help patients with symptoms like severe pain, nausea, seizures, muscle spasms and emacipation register as legal pot users. Once registered, patients would plant a pot garden containing up to three mature plants. When away from home, they would be permitted to carry up to one ounce of marijuana with them - but larger amounts would be permitted if deemed medically necessary. Given variations in potency and tolerance, though, it's anybodys guess how medical necsessity would be determined, except subjectively. This is analogous to allowing people in severe pain to cultivate their own opium poppies instead of going to the drug store to pick up a prescription of morphine, which is refined from the juice of the plant's seed pods. Like morphine, in fact, the active ingredient in marijuana, tetrahydrocannabinol (THC), is already available by prescription. Marketed under the name of Marinol, THC pills have all the medicinal qualities of marijuana - they boost appetite and cut nausea - but with the added benifits of extensive testing and carefully controlled dosing. Plus, " Want a piece of my Marinol tablet?" doesn't have the quite the cachet among impressionable kids as, " Hey want a hit of my joint?" Supporters of medical marijuana object to Marinol because it takes longer to act than pot, which is usally smoked rather than eaten. Also, they say it can be difficult for those with nausea to keep the pill down. If these objections have merit, and smoking marijuana does, in fact, provide relief that no other drug can, then we are open to its use for medical purposes. Even in that case, however, allowing people with broadly categorized symtoms to grow their own plants with virtually no oversight would be a ludicrous soulution. Instead, they should have to pick up their pot at the pharmacy - in measured doses, and with a doctor's prescription - just like people who take morphine. Far from doing this, Measure 67 seems to be little more than an attempt to bring about incremental legalization of marijuana. - --- Checked-by: Pat Dolan