Pubdate: Mon, 10 May 1999 Source: Seattle Times (WA) Copyright: 1999 The Seattle Times Company Contact: http://www.seattletimes.com/ Author: Peter Carlson, The Washington Post DEA MUSEUM EXHIBITS 15 DECADES OF LOVE, HATE FOR DRUGS WASHINGTON - The United States government's newest museum displays hash pipes, hookahs, bongs, American-flag rolling papers and several bags of marijuana. It also has grubby old syringes, bent spoons, a pill bottle labeled "heroin" and a grisly photo of a junkie killed by an overdose. Plus a diorama titled "An American Head Shop, Circa 1970s." It's called the Drug Enforcement Administration Museum and Visitors Center and it opens today at the DEA headquarters in Arlington, Va. A modest exhibit, it fills a long, narrow, 2,200-square-foot room containing scores of photos and a fair amount of drugs. The permanent exhibit, "Illegal Drugs in America: A Modern History," is a delightfully graphic reminder that America's intense love-hate relationship with intoxication goes back further than most people realize. "By 1900, when one in 200 Americans was addicted," reads one wall panel, "the typical addict was a white middle-class female hooked through medical treatment." That was "the golden age of patent medicines" - unregulated elixirs that promised cures for just about everything and that frequently contained "whopping doses of opiates or cocaine." The exhibit is a 150-year chronological tour that proves drug abuse to be as American as, well, alcohol abuse. As far back as the Civil War, high-powered opiates were routinely used as home remedies. One display quotes Mary Chesnut, the famous Confederate diarist, writing about her casual use of narcotics for the relief of wartime woes: "I relieved the tedium by taking laudanum." It was the Civil War, not Vietnam, that produced the first addicted veterans - - so many wounded soldiers got hooked on morphine that addiction was nicknamed "the soldier's disease" or "Army disease." By the turn of the century, Americans were guzzling all sorts of magical cure-alls. The museum displays bottles of Godfrey's Cordial, Grove's Baby Bowel Formula and Greene's Syrup of Tar - all of which contained opium. The American genius for hype is evident in the advertisements for these potions. An ad for Cocaine Toothache Drops shows two cute little tykes crossing a bucolic stream. The slogan: "Instantaneous Cure!" An ad for Coca-Cola, which actually contained cocaine until 1903, promised that it would "ease the tired brain, soothe the rattled nerves and restore wasted energy to both Mind and Body." Meanwhile, Bayer was touting its new product - "Heroin" - as "highly effective against coughs" History of DEA In addition to teaching visitors about the history of drug abuse, the museum is also designed, curator Jill Jonnes says, to chronicle the history of the DEA and its predecessors. In 1906 the government began regulating drugs, and in 1930 it established the Bureau of Narcotics, the bureaucratic grandfather of the DEA. "Every narcotics agent was issued a badge, a Thompson submachine gun and a pair of hand grenades," reads the sign beside a case displaying, yes, a Tommy gun, a couple of grenades and a slew of badges. Apparently, the grenade-toting narcs were successful: "By World War II, American addicts were a diminishing cohort of aging white males." By then, though, the Bureau had found a new target - young black males who played jazz and smoked marijuana, which was banned by federal law in 1937. "Jazz rebels in revolt against `square' America took up marijuana as part of their stance as "hepsters,' " reads the introduction to a series of photos of jazz hepsters, including Red Rodney, Billie Holiday and Charlie Parker - all of whom later became heroin addicts. Not pictured is Louis Armstrong, who, according to his biographers, avidly smoked pot for 40 years while assiduously avoiding anything stronger. Jazz musicians are not the only artists attacked in the exhibit for advocating drugs. So are "Beat literary types." Their photos identify them - Jack Kerouac, Allen Ginsberg, William Burroughs. "Popular culture glorified the benefits of drugs while ignoring the tragedy and despair they caused," the wall says. Rise of `modern drug culture' Baby boomers of a certain age may experience some nostalgia - and quite a bit of embarrassment - when viewing a display titled "The Rise of the Modern Drug Culture: 1960s to 1970s." There are chocolate-flavored rolling papers, a hideously garish psychedelic poster of Jimi Hendrix and a water pipe made out of a mayonnaise jar and four rubber tubes. As the museum reveals, drugs have a way of spawning theories that later prove embarrassingly naive. In 1975, the White House - the Ford White House - - issued a drug report theorizing that cocaine "usually does not result in serious social consequences, such as crime, hospital emergency-rooms admissions or death." A decade later, the crack cocaine epidemic resulted in very serious social consequences, including unprecedented levels of crime, emergency rooms filled with overdoses and gunshot cases, and many, many deaths. The display that covers that era features pictures of the corpses of various coke dealers - including Pablo Escobar, the Colombian cartel "jefe" - who had been gunned down. There's also a lime-green surfboard that was hollowed out and filled with dope by smugglers. And a beautiful red Harley-Davidson confiscated from a dope-dealing Hell's Angel. Not to mention a lot of powerful guns, including a diamond-studded Colt .45 seized from a Colombian dealer. The DEA Museum is located at 700 Army-Navy Drive, Arlington, Va., (across from the Pentagon City Metro stop). It is open free of charge on weekdays by appointment only. - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D