The Project 50 Archival Files Collection

A Google drive filled with documents and news articles from the first 20 years of the medical cannabis movement.


  • Follow this link to Project 50’s Google Drive folder on ACT, the Alliance for Cannabis Therapeutics.
    ACT was the first non-profit association dedicated to medical cannabis and patients. It was founded in 1981 and during its first years it focused on federal legislation (H.R. 4498) and the hearings before DEA Judge Francis Young on rescheduling marijuana. In the 1990s, ACT created numerous small groups, most notably the Marijuana AIDS Research Service (MARS). The patient application packet prepared by MARS for AIDS patients revolutionized the Compassionate IND application process and inundated federal agencies with requests for access to legal marijuana for medical purposes. Panicked by the demand for medical marijuana, especially by AIDS patients, the federal government closed the Compassionate IND program, thereby shutting the door on any legal means to cannabis. Public outcry stunned the federal government but it was too late to go back. Before long, Prop 215 was passed and citizens took matters into their own hands.

  • This link takes you to the Project 50 Google Drive’s folder on medical cannabis legal cases. In addition to the 1976 case that started it all, U.S. v Randall, Description text goes here

  • Link: https://bit.ly/4fCLBoZ
    This section gathers formal and informal written works—articles, op-eds, book excerpts, and newsletters—produced by advocates, journalists, and policymakers. Together, they trace the evolving public dialogue and provide primary-source context for scholars studying the rhetoric of reform.

  • Link: https://bit.ly/41EaTNz‍ ‍

    This folder documents the wave of legislation and regulatory petitions pursued during the 1978–1994 period. It likely includes state legislative reports, correspondence with members of Congress, and campaign materials reflecting the complex interplay between federal resistance and state innovation.

  • Link: https://bit.ly/4luyM1h

    The core of the archive: an extensive chronological collection of more than a thousand digitized press clippings from national and local newspapers. These provide a contemporaneous view of the medical cannabis story, showing how shifting public attitudes and individual patient stories drove policy change.

  • Link: https://bit.ly/4mBg6xQ

    Lots of fun here. Videos from every period of the early medical cannabis movement days. You can watch Robert Randall on a 1977 Good Morning America and also his final public speech at the first Patients Out of Time conference in April 2000.

Collectively, the PUBLIC directory functions as a research and storytelling portal, bridging archival preservation with public education. It invites scholars, students, and advocates to explore the social history of medical cannabis through the original voices that shaped it.


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The originators retain all rights.