The Michigan Daily-Wednesday, June 13,1979-Page 9 State Senate panel OKs pot for therapeutic use By ADRIENNE LYONS The state Senate Health and Social Services Committee yesterday ap- proved a bill which would legalize the use of marijuana for therapeutic pur- poses. The bill now will be sent to the Senate floor for a vote. The bill, introduced in March, sets up a "therapeutic research program for people undergoing cancer chemotherapy and glaucoma," said Terry Redford, an aide to Sen. Edward Pierce (D-Ann Arbor), chairman of the Senate committee. ALTHOUGH a good deal of the bill's language was changed, Sen. Stephen Monsma (D-Kent), who introduced the bill, said he was pleased with the final draft. Under the bill, the Public Health Department would apply to the state as a research program through which in- dividual physicians in the state could prescribe marijuana to their patients. "Records would be kept in terms of patient reaction," Monsma said. Redford said the federal government would supply "pre-packaged" marijuana joints to patients with prescriptions. He explained the marijuana would come from federal - claimed that marijuana may prevent farms which grow the plant, including a glaucoma sufferers from going blind. five-acre farm in Mississippi. The Senate recently passed another MONSMA ALSO said if, for some bill, which lowered the penalty for reason, the federal government no possession of one ounce of marijuana. longer could provide the substance, That bill went through a lengthy debate marijuana the state had confiscated for in the Senate before it finally passed. illegal use could be used in the MONSMA SAID he did not expect program. much opposition to this bill when it goes Redford explained there are several to the Senate floor for a vote in a few therapeutic uses for marijuana. days. "I suppose I should know better "Chemotherapy has severe side effec- by now than to make flat-out predic- ts" such as nausea, she said. tions, but I suspect it will be positively "Marijuana prevents nausea." She also received," Monsma said. "No one has GUERRILLA WAREFARE CONTINUES: surfaced to oppose it." Redford said she agreed with Mon- sma. "There will be less debate than the marijuana penalty reduction bill," she said. "Most legislators view it as a compassionate means by which someone who is seriously ill" can use marijuana. Redford said it was "highly unlikely" that the program would be abused by marijuana-smokers seeking extra pot. She called the program a very "struc- tured" one which conforms to all federal agencies' requirements. Americans escape from Nicaragua MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -- Six- ty-one Americans guarded by Nicaraguan troops and U.S. Marines sped to a secret airstrip outside Managua yesterday and took off aboard a U.S. Air Force plane to escape the in- tensifying guerrilla war against President Anastasio Somoza. Evacuation of the Americans - Filibuster threatened in draft registration vote mostly wives and children of U.S. Em- bassy staff members - to the Panama, Canal Zone came as fresh fighting raged between Somoza's national guard troops and Sandinista guerrillas in many sections of this Central American capital. At one point, as gunfire rocked a poor district a few hundred yards from the U.S. Embassy, guards at the embassy opened fire on bushes across the road. People standing in the compound scrambled for cover. The incident was not explained immeidately. ELSEWHERE in Managua, wit- nesses reported a rocket fired by a government warplane destroyed the building housing Nicaragua's last remaining opposition newspaper, La Prensa. And a Sandinista communique claimed a defecting national guard pilot bombed a guard air base at Managua's international airport before flying to Costa Rica. An attempt to airlift the Americans out Monday was aborted when a firefight broke out between guardsmen and guerrillas on the road to the Managua airport. Yesterday morning, the American evacuees rode through the streets of Managua in a 13-vehicle convoy flying white flags. Hundreds of Nicaraguan refugees, also carrying white, were streaming out of the city at the same time. A TRUCKLOAD of Nicaraguan troops rode at the front of the convoy and another brought up the rear. Each of the trucks, automobiles and vans carrying evacuees was driven by a Marine or a State Department security officer, some wearing flak jackets and all of them armed, some with shotguns anctothers with pistols. The convoy sped to an airstrip outside Managua where an Air Force C-130 Hercules transport was standing by, its four turboprop engines revving. The evacuees scurried out of the vehicles, some women hurriedly kissing their husbands goodbye, and filed up the plane's tail ramp. AFTER THE vehicles were clear of the runway, the big transport took off. It landed later at Howard Air Force Base in the Canal Zone, and the evacuees were checked into a Panama City hotel until space could be found for them on commercial flights back to the United States. (Continued from Page 3) v by the Senate and House. THE HOUSE BILL, which contains a registration provision, is expected to come up for debate in the next week or so. In a letter to Senate colleagues, Hat- field and McGovern and Sens. Mike Gravel (D-Alaska) and Henry Bellmon (R-Okla.) lobbied against draft registration. They noted that the president already has authaority to resume registration-which ended in 1975-and that Defense Secretary Harold Brown has said it is not necessary to meet manpower mobilization requirements. THE PENTAGON'S Joint Chiefs of Staff have called for renewal of registration. In other action on the bill, the Senate voted 78-18 against an amendment by Sen. Gary Hart (D-Cola.) to delte $1.3 billion for the Navy's F-18 fighter- attack plane. On a voice vote, the Senate approved restrictions on the use of money for a low-frequency system for com- municating with submerged sub- marines. The restrictions would ban spending any money for the program unless the president certified it was in the national interest, that a)deployment site had been picked and that he had approved the site. Beyond that, it would ban spending funds for full-scale development of the project through Oct. 1, 1980. Senate rejects retention of sanctions on Rhodesia (Continued from Page 1) determined that elections which led to the installation of a black prime minister were not free or fair. The Senate vote came after a long debate in which the president's suppor- ters contended that lifting the sanctions would result in a loss of U.S. influence and prestige in Africa and possible economic reprisals by such African nations as oil-rich Nigeria. THE DEBATE WAS on an amen- dment to'the military procurement bill. Left untouched by yesterday's action was an amendment by Sen. Harry Byrd (Ind.-Va.), already included in the bill, which would require Carter to lift the sanctions. Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairman of the 'Senate Foreign Relations Committee, pleaded with the Senate not to "rush to judgment" on the issue. Church's committee had approved the compromise measure earlier yesterday. The proposal would have allowed Carter to continue the current trade sanctions even after Dec. 1 if he certified that the trade embargo was in the national interest. Sen. Jacob Javits (R-N.Y.), an author of the compromise amendment, said it would preserve the power of Congress to life the sanctions while giving Carter maneuvering room to work with Great Britain for a set- tlement in Zimbabwe Rhodesia. AVENUE at LIBERTY ST. 761-9700 Formerly Fifth Forum Theater "One of the movie mile- stones.of the decade" -REX REED