Source: Times Union (Albany, NY) Contact: Website: http://www.timesunion.com/ Pubdate: Sun, 12 Apr 1998 TRUTH BECOMES THE FIRST CASUALTY IN MARIJUANA WAR Terry O'Neill's letter, "Effective illegal-drug policy must include prevention,'' (Times Union April 2) contains misleading statistics regarding the increase in teenage marijuana use. According to the 1997 Monitoring The Future Study, considered the best early warning system for drug use among youth, marijuana use among eighth-, 10th- and 12th-graders is down 41 percent from its peak in 1978. Mr. O'Neill's mistake was relying upon information taken from the Drug Enforcement Administration Web page. The DEA has its own agenda -- and it doesn't include providing accurate information regarding marijuana. For example, the DEA claims, "There are over 10,000 scientific studies that prove marijuana is a harmful addictive drug.'' According to Beverly Urbanek, research associate of the University of Mississippi Research Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, the "10,000 studies'' claim is simply not true. The institute maintains a 12,000-citation bibliography on the marijuana literature. Ms. Urbanek explained, "Many of the studies cited in the bibliography are clinical, but the total number also includes papers on the chemistry and botany of the cannabis plant, cultivation, epidemiological surveys, legal aspects, eradication studies, detection, storage, economic aspects and a whole spectrum of others that do not mention positive or negative effects.'' "However, we have never broken down that figure into positive/negative papers, and I would not even venture a guess as to what that number would be. You cannot provide a list of 10,000 negative studies,'' she said. When the government declared war on marijuana, truth was the first casualty. WALTER F. WOUK President National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws Howes Cave