Pubdate: Sun, 25 July, 1999 Source: Gainesville Sun, The (FL) Copyright: 1999 The Gainesville Sun Contact: http://www.sunone.com/ Forum: http://www.sunone.com/interactive.shtml Author: Carl Hulse, Gainesville Sun Washington Bureau TOP POT LOBBYIST STILL HIGH ON CAUSE WASHINGTON - His graying hair reaches the ears, but it is considerably shorter than the near shoulder-length style Keith Stroup wore in the 1970s when he was known as Mr. Marijuana, the prime minister of pot. The founder of the nation's foremost marijuana legalization lobby has also trimmed back the reckless behavior and anti-establishment antics that turned him into a counterculture hero on college campuses and persona non grata in some quarters of Washington. But don't be misled: The 55 year-old executive director of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws has not completely changed his ways. Stroup still gets stoned. "Contrary to what the government would lead you to believe, a lot of us did not give up our marijuana smoking", said Stroup, who has made a career out of disputing government drug claims. "We may not be as open about it. We may have to work and support a family. That doesn't mean when Friday night comes along that we don't still smoke marijuana instead of drink alcohol." Almost 30 years ago, Stroup and a few similarly rebellious friends created NORML in a burst of indignation over the jailing of thousands of young marijuana smokers. After eight roller-coaster years at the helm, Stroup was forced out in late 1978 for violating the drug movement's code against informing on another's drug use. Creating a sensation at the time, Stroup - angry over the Carter administration's policy in support of spraying the herbicide paraquat on Mexican marijuana fields - confirmed for a reporter that the president's drug adviser snorted cocaine at a wild NORML party in 1977. The revelation in the summer of 1978 contributed to the aide's ouster but ignited a push for Stroup's removal as well. In the ensuing years, Stroup (rhymes with top) practiced law, directed the trade association for criminal defense lawyers, joined other public interest efforts and worked on behalf of family farmers. But in the mid-1990s, he was invited back to the board of NORML to restore some vigor to the group. He formally returned as full-time director two years ago. Stroup concedes his side was battered in the drug war during his exile; marijuana was closer to being legalized in NORML's 1970s heyday than it is now. "For the last 20 years all you heard was 'just say no,' mandatory penalties, zero tolerance and how many people can we lock up in this country," Stroup said. But he and other key members of the legalization movement believe the pendulum may be swinging their way. They point to the approval of medical marijuana initiatives in a handful of states and a decision last year by voters in Oregon - the first state to drop criminal penalties for marijuana possession in 1973 - to reject a legislative push to recriminalize it. "I think it is beginning to turn," said Dr. Lester Grinspoon, chairman of the NORML Foundation and a Harvard Medical School professor whose 1971 work "Marijuana Reconsidered" was one of the first scholarly papers to claim the drug was essentially harmless. A House subcommittee is even conducting hearings on the concept of legalization, not that anyone expects the anti-drug, GOP- controlled Congress to move forward on that front anytime soon. Conservative lawmakers are more apt to advocate jailing people like Stroup for pressing legalization. Rep. Bob Barr, R-Ga., inquired about that possibility at one of the recent hearings but was dissuaded. To anti-drug leaders, legalization proponents like Stroup are dangerous and misguided elitists concerned more with their own gratification than the larger consequences. "They are mostly affluent, well educated and socially distant from the potential victims of their experiment, " said a disdainful Thomas A. Constantine, former administrator of the Drug Enforcement Agency, during one of the recent legalization hearings of the House Subcommittee on Criminal Justice, Drug Policy and Human Resources. Legalization proponents ignore evidence that marijuana can be detrimental to some users, particularly younger people whose memory, motivation and energy level can be affected, said Dr. Herbert Kleber, medical director at the National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse at Columbia University. "They are still fighting this old battle that marijuana is a perfectly safe, harmless drug," he said. "To that extent, they are not credible." Stroup was one of the first combatants in that fight. Born in a small rural community in southern Illinois, Stroup came to Washington in 1968 for law school at Georgetown. The ambitious young man quickly grew enamored of the high-powered atmosphere. After a friend was busted, Stroup, then working as a government lawyer to avoid the draft, became intrigued with the enforcement of marijuana laws. He originated the concept of NORML, which he got off the ground in 1971. After a struggling start, Playboy's, Hugh Hefner agreed to finance a full-fledged lobbying operation, and NORML took off. Stroup toured college campuses, showing the campy movie "Reefer Madness." NORML conferences became a fixture in Washington. Prominent people like former Attorney General Ramsey Clark joined the group's board. The fast talking, fact-tossing Stroup was a master at manipulating the sympathetic press and he became a leading voice for the pot-smoking generation of the 1970s. He also lived the life himself, was arrested for possession in Canada and had numerous scrapes with the law, a colorful history chronicled in the. 1981 book, "High in America" by Patrick Anderson. "Stroup was more than an effective lobbyist; he had made himself a star," wrote Anderson. "In a city of dull, careful men, he was out an outlaw, an adventurer." Stroup did drugs, rubbed shoulders with rock stars and other counterculture, celebrities and generally roared down the fast lane. But he came to a screeching halt in 1978. In the midst of a bitter fight over the herbicide spraying, Stroup contributed to the downfall of Peter Bourne, President Carter's drug adviser. Angry over Bourne's paraquat stance, Stroup helped make the cocaine incident public. Stroup regrets his role, but said he was driven by anger over the potential herbicide poisoning of unsuspecting marijuana smokers. As time passed, NORML drifted into the background. With hundreds of thousands of marijuana arrests still recorded each year, some top members sought to recapture its original spark and invited Stroup back to revive the flagging movement. Stroup admitted he might seem "out of sync slightly" as a middle-aged champion of marijuana use, someone known around his own office as a "cool old guy." But while his delivery is more tempered than in the past, his message is the same. "I don't feel as out of step as you might think," he said. "We've got a significant segment of the American public who are regular smokers. Our challenge is to translate what is clearly public support into public policy." - --- MAP posted-by: Thunder