Pubdate: Sun, 08 Jul 2012
Source: New York Times (NY)
Copyright: 2012 The New York Times Company
Contact: http://www.nytimes.com/ref/membercenter/help/lettertoeditor.html
Website: http://www.nytimes.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/298
Author: Douglas Martin
Bookmark: http://mapinc.org/people/Nahas

DR. GABRIEL NAHAS, MARIJUANA OPPONENT, DIES AT 92

Dr. Gabriel G. Nahas, a controversial medical researcher who became a 
prominent crusader against marijuana after being shocked to hear, at 
a PTA meeting in 1969, about the drug's widespread use, died on June 
28 in Manhattan. He was 92.

The cause was a respiratory infection, his family said.

Dr. Nahas did research to find the physiological effects of smoking 
marijuana, wrote 10 books on the drug and became a leader of antidrug 
organizations. He was a visible ally of Nancy Reagan in her "just say 
no" to drugs campaign as the first lady in the 1980s.

Dr. Nahas saw his antidrug campaign as nothing less than a 
continuation of the fight against totalitarianism, which for him 
began during World War II as a decorated leader of the French 
Resistance; like totalitarianism, he believed, drugs enslaved the 
mind. He was awarded the Legion of Honor by France, the Presidential 
Medal of Freedom by the United States and the Order of the British 
Empire for his wartime heroism.

His research, which he did as a professor at Columbia University and 
reported in more than 700 articles in scientific journals, suggested 
that marijuana contributed to cancers of the head and neck, leukemia, 
infertility, brain damage and a weakening of the immune system. He 
also wrote two books on cocaine, which he contended could cause 
irreversible brain damage.

Dr. Nahas became known as much for his advocacy as for his science. 
He was the chairman of the scientific advisory committee of the 
National Federation of Parents for Drug-Free Youth, now the National 
Family Partnership. He was a consultant to the United Nations 
Commission on Narcotics in the 1980s and '90s. In 1985, he appeared 
at an antidrug rally with Mrs. Reagan and the actor William Shatner, 
who was in costume as his best-known character, Captain Kirk of "Star 
Trek." Dr. Nahas testified frequently at government hearings.

His critics in the scientific community sometimes assailed his 
methodology, questioning the large judgments he made often based on 
small samples. Organizations promoting the decriminalization or 
legalization of marijuana painted him as a villain. The New England 
Journal of Medicine once described his work as "psychopharmacological 
McCarthyism that compels him to use half-truths, innuendo and 
unverifiable assertions."

But Robert L. DuPont, drug czar in the Nixon and Ford 
administrations, called Dr. Nahas "the Paul Revere of drug abuse," 
saying, "He alone lit the beacon warning of the threat of the modern 
drug abuse epidemic."

Gabriel Georges Nahas was born in Alexandria, Egypt, on March 4, 
1920, the son of a French mother and a Lebanese father. As a boy, he 
asked his family about the people he passed on the street who 
appeared intoxicated or lethargic and was told they were addicted to hashish.

He was a medical student at the University of Toulouse during World 
War II when the Germans occupying France found an anti-Nazi pamphlet 
in his room. He was brutally beaten and imprisoned but refused to 
talk. He joined the Resistance against the Nazis and helped convey 
some 200 downed Allied airmen to safety.

After the war, he traveled to the United States for further 
scientific training and earned master's degrees from the University 
of Rochester in New York State and the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, 
Minn. He completed a doctorate in cardiopulmonary physiology at the 
University of Minnesota.

Soon after he joined the College of Physicians and Surgeons of 
Columbia University in 1959, he published research on a new drug to 
alter the acidity or alkalinity of cells in the human body. In 1969, 
after hearing a police sergeant describe the marijuana menace at a 
PTA meeting in Englewood, N.J., he began seeking scientific evidence 
to show that marijuana was "dangerous to man and society."

In 1972, he published his first book about the dangers of the drug, 
"Marihuana: Deceptive Weed." In 1974, he announced that he had 
discovered a link between the drug and the body's immune system. "The 
findings represent the first direct evidence of cellular damage from 
marijuana in man," he said in a statement.

But scientists at the University of California, Los Angeles, who 
studied the chromosomes of volunteers who smoked marijuana, found no 
deficiency in immune responses and no chromosome abnormalities, which 
Dr. Nahas had also predicted. Nevertheless, Dr. Nahas suggested that 
the results prompt reconsideration of a recent government report that 
marijuana's dangers were less than those of alcohol.

His willingness to make strong political and social judgments was 
again evident in his more popular 1976 book, "Keep Off the Grass," 
which contended that every marijuana user was a "pusher" of the drug.

Dr. Nahas's conservatism extended beyond narcotics. In the 1970s, he 
marshaled his newly public persona to sign newspaper advertisements 
criticizing opponents of the Vietnam War.

Dr. Nahas is survived by his wife, the former Marilyn Cashman; a 
sister, Helene Nahas Peters; three children; and seven grandchildren.
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MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom