The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com Friday, October 15, 2010 - 3A NEWS BRIEFS PORT HURON, Mich. 0 Man serving life for murder wins appeal A federal judge has overturned the murder conviction of a man serving life for a 1986 killing in a college parking lot in Port Huron. Temujin (TEM'-uh-gin) Kensu was known back then as Fred Free- man. He says he didn't shoot Scott Macklem and was 400 miles away that day. Judge Denise Page Hood yester- day said Kensu's rights were vio- lated by an ineffective trial lawyer and misconduct by the prosecutor. The 52-page decision includes a reference to an informant who says W he lied at the 1987trial when he said Kensu had admitted the murder in the St. Clair County jail. The Michigan attorney general's office can appeal the decision or give Kensu a new trial. He won't immediately be released from pris- on. WASHINGTON D.C. House to vote on bonus payment for Social Security The House will vote in Novem- ber on a bill to provide $250 pay- ments to Social Security recipients to make up for the lack of a cost-of- living increase for next year, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said yester- day. The Social Security Administra- tion is expected to announce today that more than 58 million retirees and disabled Americans will go a second consecutive year without an increase in benefits. Pelosi said she will schedule a vote on a bill to provide the $250 payments when Congress returns S for a lame duck session after the Nov. 2 congressional elections. The payments would be similar to those provided by the government's mas- sive economic recovery package last year. But even if Pelosi can get the House to approve a second pay- ment, the proposal faces opposition in the Senate. JUNEAU, Alaska Sarah Paln touts life in Alaska in TLC series trailer " Sarah Palin says she prefers life in Alaska to being "in some stuffy old political office." The comments from the former Alaska governor - and potential 2012 presidential contender - come in a trailer for her upcoming " TLC series, "Sarah Palin's Alaska." The trailer shows images of Palin and her family in the Alaska out- doors, engaging in activities such as trekking on a snowy mountainside, four-wheeling and dog-sledding. It appeared on the website zap2it. corm. Palin says in the trailer: "I'd rath- er be doing this than in some stuffy old political office. I'd rather be out here, being free." The series, an eight-week travel- ogue of sorts, is set to begin airing Nov. 14, after the mid-term elec- tions on which the former 2008 GOP vice presidential candidate has been focused. BINT JBEIL, Lebanon Iran president taunts Israel from Lebanon border Iran's president taunted arch- enemy Israel yesterday from just across the tense border in Lebanon, rallying tens of thousands of Hez- bollah supporters as Israeli attack helicopters buzzed in the skies nearby. "The world should know that the Zionists will perish," declared Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, echoing previous verbal attacks in which he has said Israel should be wiped off the map. "Occupied Palestine will be lib- erated from the filth of occupation by the strength of resistance and through the faith of the resistance," the Iranian leader vowed as cheers went up from the crowd, waving a sea of Lebanese, Iranian and Hez- bollah flags. The fiery speech was delivered in the border village of Bint Jbeil, which was nearly destroyed by Israeli bombs in the 2006 war with Hezbollah and rebuilt with the help of Iranian cash. A stronghold of the Shiite militant group, Ahmadine- jad's visit to the southern Lebanese area was denounced by Washing- ton and Israel as a provocation. - Compiled from Daily wire reports. For medical marijuana patients, dosing is DIY More research necessary to determine effects of drug on conditions By SUZANNE JACOBS Daily StaffReporter In 2008 Michigan voters legal- ized the medical use of marijuana, but unlike most other medicines, marijuana does not come with a standard dosing procedure. The responsibility of dosing the medicine falls to the patient because the effects of marijuana vary depending on the individ- ual, the condition being treated and the type of marijuana used. Until scientists do more research on the individual compounds in marijuana, their effects on medi- cal conditions will remain unpre- dictable. Dennis Hayes, one of the found- ers ofthe Ann Arbor Medical Mari- juana Patient Collective (A2M2PC) and a lawyer who specializes in medical marijuana legislation, said that even veteran marijuana users don't have a way to calculate impor- tant effects such as timing, intensi- ty and duration. Mike McLeod, another found- er of A2M2PC, said experts may be able to devise an optimal dos- ing approach for marijuana in the future, but it won't be pos- sible without federally-supported research on the individual com- pounds in marijuana. Until then, he said, patients will have to navigate the dosing landscape themselves. McLeod has worked with a doctor in California who has a lot of experience with medical mari- juana. They have made efforts to compile dataon what works best for different patients, but McLeod said the situation is "just a real politi- cal hot potato," adding that more research is needed, but it won't come until there's a change in fed- eral drug policy. Dr. Daniel Clauw, director of the University's Chronic Pain and Fatigue Research Center, helped write the University Hospital's ANNIVERSARY From Page lA ored Al and Judith Guskin, two University alumni who listened to Kennedy's speech as graduate stu- dents and later helped spearhead the formation of the Peace Corps. In her speech on the Union steps, Coleman recalled the time she visited the White House as a finalist for a science competi- tion and met Kennedy. It was the March after he established the Peace Corps, and she said she thanked him for his work. "I could not have imagined that one day I would have the privilege to stand literally at the birthplace of the Peace Corps and thank the students and faculty whose enthu- siasm made JFK's vision such a powerful reality," Coleman said. In addition to commending the University community for its ser- vice, Coleman also talked about University alum Tom Hayden, a well known 1960s activist who covered Kennedy's speech as edi- tor in chief of The Michigan Daily. "Some say I was the voice of my generation, but I say I was the Guskins' mouth piece," Hayden saidinaninterviewafter the event. Hayden also spoke at the Hatch- er Graduate Library last night in front of a crowd of about 200 people about his involvement in the creation of the Peace Corps, activism in the 1960s and the role of community service in today's world. During his time as editor of The Daily, Hayden printed a letter by medical marijuana guide - acom- prehensive summary of how mari- juana reportedly affects patients with the qualifying medical condi- tions specified in Michigan's medi- cal marijuana law. He said because marijuana hasn't undergone the same level of testing that "classic drugs" have, marijuana is "more like a nutritional supplement." Clauw, who has given writ- ten certifications to some of his patients, said without more knowl- edge of the intricacies of how the drug works, physicians don't know what dose to recommend to their patients. He also said the strength and purity of the medicine varies depending on where it comes from. Mike Meno, the director of com- munications for the Marijuana Policy Project - the organization responsible for drafting Michi- gan's medical marijuana law - said that substantial research has been done on marijuana, but none of it has been done through the Federal Drug Administration because mar- ijuana is a schedule I drug under the Controlled Substances Act and is therefore held to a "ridiculous standard." The Drug Enforcement Agency has put marijuana, along with GHB, heroin and LSD, in the sched- ule I drug classification, the most restrictive out of the five drug clas- sifications listed under the CSA. The category consists of drugs that have a high potential for abuse and no accepted medical use in the United States. In 2001 the DEA denied a petition to make marijua- na a less restricted classification, 'citing its lack of medical use as the primary reason. Meno disagrees with DEA's decision and said several studies confirm marijuana's safety and medicinal properties. "It's a blatant lie for the federal government to say (marijuana) has no medical efficacy," Meno said. "There are patients who are ben- efiting from it right now." According to Dr. Rebecca Van Dyke, a professor in the Depart- ment of Internal Medicine at the University and a specialist in gas- twnenterology and hepatology, the lackoffederallysupported research the Guskins, in which the couple, inspired by Kennedy's words, out- lined their idea for the Peace Corps and asked readers to write in with their opinions. Hayden said he was surprised at the number of people who responded to the letter. "It was one of those mysterious moments where people at the mar- gins felt they mattered," he said. Later on during his time at the University, Hayden and a group of other students sent a series of questions about global policy to each presidential candidate in the 1960 election. One of the questions asked about the candidates' posi- tions on a "national youth corps serving in constructive peacetime activity abroad in place of military service." Kennedy's questionnaire was hand-delivered by one of the stu- dents when the future president visited campus shortly before his 2 a.m.speech, according-to Hayden. Though he played a role in establishing the Peace Corps, Hayden said he felt a strong desire to stay in the United States to focus on improving social issues at home, instead of going abroad. Hayden went on to be one of the founding members of Students for a Democratic Society and author of the Port Huron Statemen and later Hayden later a California state senator. In his speech, Hayden also discussed the current economic crisis. He suggested that service organizations today could func- tion like the Federal Emergency Relief Administration and the Civil Works Administration dur- on marijuana is not only because of its schedule I status, but also because it is an herbal medicine. "The problem that we have with marijuana and some herbal materi- als is they have not undergone the same level of controlled testing and so we often can't give as good information about how well will this work, what are its side effects, what might be reason to choose this material over other material," she said. Van Dyke - who said she warns her patients against using marijua- na because current research sug- gests it may increase liver scarring in patients with Hepatitis C or liver disease - added that she thinks the United States should change the way it conducts drug testing so agents like marijuana can be thor- oughly studied. Until more research is done on marijuana, many new patients who don't yet know how to dose them- selves look to local collectives for guidance. Jim Cifor, owner of the Ann Arbor Health Collective, said many of the more than 1,500 patients in the collective ask for advice on what to buy. On the first visit, he said many end up sampling a vari- ety of products. According to Cifor, certain strains of marijuana are best for specific conditions. For example, Cifor has found that the strain called Lavender works best for patients with multiple sclerosis. Arthritis patients like himself, he said, benefit fron the collec- tive's glycerin tincture - a liquid extraction of the active canna- binoids found in marijuana. To use the tincture, patients put five drops under their tongue and then wait 20 minutes to see how it affects them. In addition to marijuana seeds and tinctures, the Health Collec- tive offers massage oils, lip balms, topicalsprays, ointments and baked goods, like their chocolate-dipped coffee and cinnamon favored- "canna cake" with cannabis cream filling. Because of federal drug laws and to avoid legal troubles, Cifor declined to say how much his prod- ucts cost. ing the Great Depression and create needed jobs. Expanding community service programs abroad, Hayden said, would also contribute to shedding a more pos- itive light on the United States. Hayden also expressed his approval for the Obama Adminis- tration's $215 million increase in "funding for the Peace Corps, but he added that this figure is miniscule compared to how much the United States is spending on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, which will drive the nation further into debt. "I think the future of social activism in the United States rests very much with the Obama gen- eration," Hayden said. During yesterday's commemo- ration on the Union steps, Julia Darlow (D-Ann Arbor), chair of the University's Board of Regents, also commended the activism of today's University students. Kennedy's first cousin Marnee DeVine also attended the celebra- tion and said she is "thrilled that international service remains such a strong commitment on the part of Michigan's faculty, staff." Several speakers expressed their hope of continuing to expand the Peace Corps. Harris Wofford, former Democratic U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania and an archi- tect of the Peace Corps, said it is time to get serious about growing international service. "I'm perfectly ready to have the University of Michigan continue that leadership." - Daily Staf f Reporter Sara Boboltz contributed to this report. PHOBIC? Afraid of Snakes or Spiders? Looking for medication-free volunteers, ages 18-45, with an excessive fear of snakes or spiders to participate in a phobic research study involving visits to the Rachel Upjohn Bldg. and blood draws. Compensation pup to $320 phobiastudy@umich.edu . RB#243-1046 or call: 734-647-8354 Unim stHesalh