Pubdate: Sun, 21 Apr 2002
Source: Contra Costa Times (CA)
Copyright: 2002 Knight Ridder
Contact: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/bayarea/contact_us/feedback_np2
Website: http://www.bayarea.com/mld/cctimes
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/96
Author: Dan Reed, San Jose Mercury News
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Cannabis)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/find?115 (Cannabis - California)

COLLECTION CELEBRATES CANNABIS

Marijuana can make you forgetful. Michael Krawitz wants to help you remember.

Krawitz is a kind of curator of dope history. He's the founder of the 
traveling Cannabis Museum, which visited San Francisco last week as part of 
the convention of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws.

It's important for a museum curator to care deeply about his area of 
expertise. Krawitz cares deeply. He inhales, he samples, and while he's at 
it, he collects artifacts from the long history of cannabis, a museum 
collection that now runs to about 1,500 pieces.

About the only thing missing from his Cannabis Museum is cannabis. There 
were, however, some ashes in a nearby ashtray.

The collection contains an amazing mixture of artifacts -- original 
doctors' prescriptions for cannabis from the 1920s to treat pain or corns 
on the feet, pop fiction demonizing the weed, old medicinal containers from 
when it was used for such maladies as "sexual exhaustion."

Much of it has been hard to come by, such as the medicinal containers. 
"They're really scarce," said Krawitz, 39, whose enthusiasm shows in his 
high energy and often manic gesturing. "Not because they didn't make a lot 
of them, but because no one wants to part with them."

Krawitz began his love affair with pot after he was in a motorcycle 
accident in Guam in 1984, when he was in the Air Force.

"No," he said, "I wasn't stoned."

Sent to Hawaii for rehabilitation, another patient offered him a smoke. "I 
got a roach from a Samoan guy," he said. "It was really good stuff."

It also, he said, eased his pain and helped his recovery. He's been an avid 
fan ever since.

"That led me to seeking information about the medical use of cannabis," he 
said. Given that he used to work with his father, an auctioneer and 
antiques expert, he naturally fell into collecting artifacts from the 
history of marijuana.

In 1922, a doctor wrote a prescription ordering his patient to apply a 
cannabis compound to his corn each night. It's possible the patient used 
"Seabury's Corn Plaster," an empty container of which is in Krawitz's 
collection.

Another bottle describes its contents as a tonic and recommends, "One 
tablet three or four times daily for melancholia, sexual exhaustion, 
hysteria and nervous disorders."

Then there are the wild books and posters from a bygone era, suggesting 
that a puff on a marijuana cigarette will turn the puffer into a maniac. 
One Dell paperback called "It Ain't Hay" claims that "marijuana and murder 
make a thrilling story."

Other items include buttons and posters from campaigns to legalize pot, or 
at least its medicinal use; arm patches from uniforms for police marijuana 
eradication forces; detailed botanical drawings; and an employee badge 
labeled "War Hemp Industries Inc.," from when the ropy weed was used for 
such things as a ship's rigging.

For now, the museum has only a single image on its Web site, 
www.cannabismuseum.org. But within the next six months to a year, Krawitz 
said, he hopes to have many of the collectibles photographed and posted on 
the Web. He's been gathering his artifacts for about seven years.

"The Internet is going to be the major source of the displays," he said, 
although he and his confederates are thinking of having smaller showings at 
different locations.

The next stop for the peripatetic display will be a medical cannabis 
conference in Portland, Ore., on May 3 and 4.
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