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News (Media Awareness Project) - US CA: Marijuana Reform Club Fuming After Being Asked to Leave
Title:US CA: Marijuana Reform Club Fuming After Being Asked to Leave
Published On:2005-05-01
Source:Bakersfield Californian, The (CA)
Fetched On:2008-01-16 14:34:00
MARIJUANA REFORM CLUB FUMING AFTER BEING ASKED TO LEAVE

A Bakersfield College student club says its First Amendment rights were
violated at the Relay for Life event Saturday.

The Bakersfield College's chapter of The National Organization for the
Reform of Marijuana Laws -- or NORML -- had its booth shut down by relay
organizers.

Organizers said the group was passing out political propaganda, which is
against the American Cancer Society's bylaws.

Also, the tone of the leaflets and information was not in line with the
organization's beliefs, organizers said.

"It's not that it's NORML but that it's a political group," said Tim Gibbs,
a field advocate for the American Cancer Society's Northern California
section. "They can have a team here, but they can't promote their political
beliefs."

But group members said they quit handing out information packets after
organizers approached them.

Event organizers were harassing their members since the event started at 9
a.m., said the group's president, Morgan Collier.

They were first asked to cover the marijuana leaf pictures on the booth
corners. Then they were asked to stop handing out leaflets.

"We did everything they asked and they still asked us to leave. I feel it's
a total injustice," Collier said. "We're here with the same intention -- to
bring awareness to cancer and help patients, but we are being denied."

Campus police and BC's Dean of Students Don Turney were called in to
mediate the disturbance.

Organizers say they weren't aware of the group's political affiliation when
they approved its application.

The group used the acronym NORML to fill out the event's application. No
description of the group was required at the time of application.

It is the responsibility of the event organizers to research the
affiliation of the groups, said Turney.

"I don't think it was a misrepresentation. I think they did what they
should have done," Turney said. "It's on the organizers to know who they
are accepting."

Even then, the group should not have been denied, Turney said.

The group has held booths at other Relay for Life events around the country
without disruption.
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