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Members Of Congress Demand DEA Allow For The Private Production Of Pot
Members Of Congress Demand DEA Allow For The Private Production Of Pot
Washington, DC: Forty-five members of Congress signed a letter this week demanding that the US Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) allow private sources to manufacture cannabis for FDA-approved clinical research.
The bipartisan letter, addressed to DEA Administrator Karen Tandy, urges the agency to abide by a February 2007 ruling by DEA Administrative Law Judge Mary Ellen Bittner that found that the private production of pot is "in the public interest."
Bittners ruling was in response to the DEAs rejection of a 2001 application by the University of Massachusetts (UMass) at Amherst that sought permission to manufacture cannabis for FDA-approved clinical protocols.
High Times - Jorge Cervantes Ultimate Grow DVD (1of10)
Jorge Cervantes Ultimate Grow DVD - Part 1
Presented by: High Times
Produced by: Trans High Corp.
Directed by: David Bienenstock
Full length: 99 Minutes
Since 1983, acclaimed international cannabis cultivation writer Jorge Cervantes has sold over 500,000 copies of his book Indoor Marijuana Horticulture, while contributing common sense advice about marijuana growing to dozens of publications including a monthly Q+A column in HIGH TIMES. Now, for the first time, the world's ultimate ganja guide brings his expertise to an instructional DVD-taking you step-by-step from seeds and clones to harvest in high style.
The Purple Brain: America's New Reefer Madness
The Purple Brain: America's New Reefer Madness
The feds' new sequel to Reefer Madness
By Marsha Rosenbaum and Paul Armentano
AlterNet
June 23, 2007
More than 70 years in the making, the long-awaited sequel to the notorious 1936 film, has arrived. It's called The Purple Brain, and just like its unintentionally campy predecessor, its purpose is to frighten Americans about marijuana.
The particular target audience for the Feds' new production is the millions of parents who may have, without incident, experimented with marijuana in the 1970s, when they were about the same age as their children are today.
