Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs,alt.politics.clinton,alt.politics.libertarian,talk.politics.misc,alt.society.resistance,alt.activism,alt.hemp,alt.drugs
From: borden@netcom.com (David Borden)
Subject: PRESS RELEASE from the Drug Policy Foundation
Message-ID: <bordenCz2v11.DwM@netcom.com>
Date: Fri, 11 Nov 1994 00:36:34 GMT

  The following announcement comes to you courtesy of the Drug Reform
  Coordination Network (DRCNet).  For more info, email "drcnet@netcom.com", 
  or contact: DRCNet, P.O. Box 381813, Cambridge, MA 02238-1813, phone: 
  (617) 648-2655, fax (temporary): (617) 646-0657.

******************************************************************************

======================================================================
                        DPF CONFERENCE NEXT WEEK!
======================================================================
          a copy of our press release and a schedule follows
======================================================================

International Conference Brings 
Drug Policy Reform Debate to Washington, DC

WASHINGTON, Nov. 16 - Hundreds of advocates for major reforms in drug policy
will meet in Washington tomorrow to debate new options for drug control
policy.  The conference will focus on how the war on drugs affects
individual rights and health care, as well as ways to elevate the drug
debate on Capitol Hill.

     The Eighth International Conference 
     on Drug Policy Reform
     Thursday, Nov. 17 - Saturday, Nov. 19
     Loews L'Enfant Plaza Hotel
     480 L'Enfant Plaza, S.W., Wash., D.C.
     202-484-1000

The Drug Policy Foundation, an international forum for drug policy
alternatives, is sponsoring the event, the largest of its kind in the United
States. Following is a partial list of featured speakers.

* Gustavo de Greiff, the former Colombian prosecutor general, who raised the
conviction rate for drug cases in Colombia from 20 to 75 percent. He has
sparked controversy in the United States by calling for a serious study of
legalization as the best means of putting criminal traffickers out of
business. Dr. de Greiff is now Colombia's ambassador to Mexico.

*    U.S. Rep. Barney Frank (D-Mass.), who is now serving his seventh term
in Congress. Rep. Frank is an outspoken critic of many components of the
drug war, such as mandatory minimum sentencing. He chairs the House
Subcommittee in International Development, Finance, Trade and Monetary
Policy, and is also a member of the Judiciary and the Budget committees.

*    Kristine M. Gebbie, former U.S. AIDS Policy Coordinator, oversaw the
nation's HIV and AIDS agenda in research, services and prevention. Prior to
her appointment by President Clinton, Ms. Gebbie served as Secretary of the
Department of Health for Washington state.

*    Dr. Robert G. Newman, president, the Beth Israel Medical Center in New
York City, has played a major role in developing and directing addiction
treatment programs throughout the world during the past 25 years. He has
served as a consultant to the World Health Organization  and has consulted
and lectured in Australia, Hong Kong, Thailand and throughout Europe. Dr.
Newman will be giving the keynote address at the Friday luncheon.

*    Dr. Peter Beilenson, director, Baltimore Department of Health, works
with both the mayor's office and the police department to help implement
programs for addicts and the inhabitants of the poorer areas of the city.
Most recently, Dr. Beilenson aided the Maryland State House in adopting
historic needle exchange legislation.

     The conference covers a wide range of policy issues and includes two
professional tracks: one for doctors and one for lawyers. (A preliminary
schedule follows.)

====================================================
        WINNERS OF ANNUAL ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS
====================================================

     The Drug Policy Foundation is pleased to announce the winners of the
1994 Achievement Awards in Drug Policy Reform. The winners, who will be
recognized at the Saturday evening banquet, are (in order of presentation):

The New Haven (CT) Board of Young Police Commissioners
for Achievement in Law Enforcement

Michael Moore
legislator, Australian Capital Territory
for Achievement in Law

Stanton Peele
psychologist and author
for Achievement in Scholarship

Jack Herer
activist and author,
and
Louis Jones
founder, STANDUP Harlem
for Achievement in Citizen Action

Robert G. Newman, M.D.
president, Beth Israel Medical Center
for Achievement in Medicine and Treatment

William Finnegan
staff writer, The New Yorker
for Achievement in Journalism

Gustavo de Greiff
former prosecutor general of Colombia
for Outstanding Achievement in Drug Policy Reform

====================================================
To register for the conference, contact Whitney Taylor in the Washington
office @ (202) 537-5005, M-F or register at the hotel. Fees are $200, plus
extra for special events (luncheon, party, awards banquet). Special package
deals are available and offer savings on events. Loews L'Enfant Plaza Hotel
currently has no vacancies, however, the Holiday Inn near the conference
still does, 202-479-4000.
====================================================
Preliminary Conference Schedule
====================================================

Thursday, November 17, 1994

PLENARY SESSIONS

9:00a-10:00a
State of the Reform Movement
     Arnold S. Trebach, President, DPF
     David C. Condliffe, Executive Director, DPF
     Ira Glasser, Executive Director, ACLU; Board of Directors, DPF

10:00a-11:15a
Mandatory Minimum Sentencing
     Chair: Julie Stewart, President, FAMM

11:30a-12:45p
Human Rights: The Crucial Next Stage
     Chair: Kevin B. Zeese, Esq.

====================================================
2:30p-3:45p WORKSHOPS

Moral & Religious Dimensions
     Chair: The Reverend Andrew Leigh Gunn
The War on Reproductive Rights
     Chair: Lynn Paltrow, Center for Reproductive Law & Policy
Beyond Marihuana as Medicine
     Chair: Lester Grinspoon, Harvard University
Addict in the Reform Movement
     Chair: Allan Clear, New York 

====================================================
4:00p-5:30p WORKSHOPS

Drug War & the Media
     Chair: Cynthia Cotts, DPF
Marijuana & First Amendment Religious Issues
     Chair: Don Fiedler, Esq.
WHO Cocaine Panel
     Chair: David Lewis, Brown University 
====================================================

Friday, November 18, 1994

PLENARY SESSIONS

9:00a-10:30a
Health Perspectives on Drug Policy
     Margaret A. Hamburg, New York City Health Commissioner
     Kristine Gebbie, frmr National AIDS Policy Coordinator

10:45a-12:15p
Review of Clinton Administration
     Chair: David C. Condliffe, DPF

12:30p-2:00p
Luncheon ($35)
     Keynote: Dr. Robert G. Newman, Pres., Beth Israel Medical Center

====================================================
2:15p-3:45p WORKSHOPS

International Legal Developments
     Chair: Lorenz Bollinger, Professor, University of Bremen
Translating Harm Reduction for the U.S.
     Chair: George Clark, Harm Reduction Working Group
Psychedelics: The Exception to the Drug Abuse Paradigm
     Chair: Dale Gieringer, Calif. NORML
Methadone Maintenance
     Chair: Henry Blansfield

====================================================

4:00p-5:30p  WORKSHOPS

Informants: Use & Misuse (Legal Track)
     Chair: Dennis Fitzgerald, Esq.
Needle Exchange: Practicalities of Implementation
     Chair: Peter Beilenson, Director, Health Services, Baltimore
Harm Reduction Principles & Practice
     Chair: Ernie Drucker, Montefiore Medical Center
Medical Professional Round Table
     Chair: David Lewis, Brown University
Canadian Drug Scene
     Chair: Barry Beyerstein, Simon Fraser University

====================================================
9:00p-1:00a
THE ANTI-PROHIBITIONIST BALL ($15)
1920s-era music, costume & fun
====================================================

Saturday, November 19, 1994

PLENARY SESSIONS

9:00a-11:00a
Reform Organizations: The Next Generation
     Chair: Ethan Nadelmann, the Lindesmith Center

11:15a-12:45p 
Pain Control and Drugs 
     Chair: Arnold S. Trebach, DPF

====================================================
2:15p-3:45p  WORKSHOPS

Acupuncture
     Chair: Lori Jenkins, Parent Resource Center, Dade County
Indian Hemp Drugs Commission Report Centennial
     Chair: Tod Mikuriya
25th Anniversary Report -- Eisenhower Fdn.
     Chair: Lynn A. Curtis, President, Eisenhower Fdn.
Understanding D.A.R.E.
     Chair: Richard Evans, Esq.
Police Perspectives
     Chair: Joe McNamara, frmr San Jose Chief of Police

====================================================

4:00p-5:30p  WORKSHOPS

The Medicalization of Ibogaine
     Chair: Howard Lotsof, NDA International
Needle Exchange: Street Worker's Perspective
     Chair: Jon Paul Hammond, Coordinator, Prevention Point, Philadelphia
Drug Use Among Students: Casual Assumptions and Prevention Programs
     Chair: Melody Lark, Southwest Regional Laboratory
Non-Deviant Drug Use
     Chair: David Duncan, Brown University 
Double Jeopardy in Forfeiture Cases
     Chair: Jeffrey Steinborn, Esq.
====================================================

6:45p    
Reception 
7:15p
Awards Banquet ($70)

-end-

==============================================================================

DRCNet is a non-profit entity dedicated to getting the word out to activists
on what you can do to work for reform of the nations drug laws and other
related laws and policies.  DRCNet solicits information from national and
state level activist groups on how people can help them work for reform, and
makes frequent announcements by e-mail, fax, mail and phone to its "rapid- 
response team".  DRCNet also publishes "The Activist Guide", a monthly 
"what you can do" drug policy reform journal.  Full membership in the 
Drug Reform Coordination Network is $25, and includes The Activist Guide 
and membership in the rapid-response team.  Newsletter alone is $18 for 12 
issues, and rapid-response team alone is $10.  (All material is available 
by e-mail for free.)  For more information on DRCNet's publications and 
educational outreach projects, contact:

DRCNet, P.O. Box 381813, Cambridge, MA 02238-1813
(617) 648-2655 / (617) 646-0657 (temporary fax#) / email: drcnet@netcom.com

============================================================================ 
     Peace       Justice       Freedom       Compassion       Truth
============================================================================

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                               END THE DRUG WAR
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