THL BA I I ALIUN FRIDAY, APRIL 20, 1979 page o haso wpoiaij] national J ialleM $10,li >3786 icheduie | id persi egeSli 05 Dond : 3 mality, ot use up; few ant legalization United Press International WASHINGTON — A new government report indicates more [mericans are using marijuana and softening their stand against it, but e not yet ready to make it legal. The 7th Annual Report on Marijuana and Health, released Wednes day, showed a sharp rise in pot smoking, especially among teen-agers, nlus some indications of marijuana s continued therapeutic uses. J According to the report, between 1976 and 1977 — the year of the rrent survey — the number of youngsters ages 12 to 17 currently ing pot rose by nearly a third. The increase was from 12.4 to 16.1 ■rcent and nearly 30 percent of that age group has tried it once — suits that HEW Secretary Joseph Califano called “particularly alarm ing. I “It is sheer folly for millions of young Americans to indulge in a drug bile so little is know about its long-term consequences,” Califano id. But the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws id the statement was a “disservice to the public.” Spokesman Peter Meyers said Califano should also point out marijuana is far less danger ous than tobacco or alcohol — both of which are legal. The 1977 survey said 43 million people have tried pot once and 16 illion used it regularly. The 1976 survey found 36 million who tried it and 15 million regular users. More than three-quarters of the 12-17 age group and those older an 26 agreed marijuana should continue to be illegal “or that our iresent laws be made still stricter.” Even among the peak using group 18- to 25-year-olds, the report said 40 percent believe pot should remain illegal. The report also found that among both the 12-17 age group and ults over 36, “attitudes toward marijuana have become increasingly sitive.” As for the peak using group of young adults, 18-25, “there has been a 10 percent increase in the acceptability of marijuana as a regular mmercial product.” No new discoveries have been made regarding therapeutic applica- ions of marijuana, according to the report, but “its use in the treat- of nausea accompanying cancer chemotherapy and in the treat ment of glaucoma remain promising.” Among other findings: —More men than women smoke pot; —More whites than members of minority groups smoke pot; —There have been few new research developments; —Combined use of marijuana and alcohol may be more hazardous an use of either alone; —And, there is no evidence that pot-smoking damages chromo- [omes. once, of Media object to ruling about attitude testimony TTnitorl C C Tn T*n tl o <-* r-t ■« ■»-* o 4- /-» V-v ■» /T -r-x /-»1 ■« «-»L-i /-V /d ^4- •» r-> United Press International WASHINGTON — Press groups say the Supreme Court is treading on their First Amendment rights again. They are upset by a new ruling that the Constitution does not shield journalists who are sued for libel from answering pre-trial questions about their “state of mind” and editorial discussions affecting story preparation. But a college professor says the practical impact of the decision re mains to be seen. The case involves former Lt. Col. Anthony Herbert, a career soldier who publicly charged in 1971 the Army had covered up Vietnam War atrocities. He filed a defamation suit when CBS Inc.’s “60 Minutes” ran a report in 1973, casting doubt on his allegations. During pre-trial proceedings, “60 Minutes” producer Barry Lando, one of the defendants, balked at an swering questions posed by Her bert’s lawyers about his thoughts and opinions about preparing the show and editorial conversations. Herbert noted, however, the Su preme Court in 1964 made it harder for public figures to win libel suits by requiring them to prove “actual malice” or “reckless disregard” of the truth. He said he needed to have Lando answer the questions in order to make his case. The 2nd U. S. Circuit Court of Ap peals held for the first time a jour nalist was shielded from answering questions about his “state of mind” and about internal editorial policies. Its decision was overruled Wed nesday by the Supreme Court. Jus tice Byron White, delivering the opinidn of the six-man majority, said no First Amendment privilege shields a journalist from pre-trial questions about editorial processes that may produce evidence critical to a libel case against him. Jack Landau of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press called the decision “a major defeat” for the First Amendment. Allen Neuharth, president of the American Newspaper Publishers As sociation, said it is “one more step by the current court to weaken, erode and diminish freedom of the press, and by extension, all First Amend ment freedoms.” Bill Leonard, president of CBS News, which now may have a harder time defending itself against Her bert’s libel suit, agreed the decision denies “constitutional protection to the journalist’s most precious pos sessions — his mind, his thoughts, his editorial judgment.” Prof. A.E. Dick Howard of the University of Virginia law school said he is not sure, however, just what will be the ruling’s practical effect. “There are many areas of the law in which a case turns on someone’s state of mind,” he noted. “Motives *★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★ £ HATE DOING + LAUNDRY? t play a big part in litigation, and it is very common to ask people why they did what they did. 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