From: Institute for Hemp <instforhemp@delphi.com>
Newsgroups: alt.hemp
Subject: GREENLEAF NEWS V5#2 Complete Text of Issue
Date: Wed, 20 Jul 94 19:50:40 -0500
Message-ID: <5A4QCLg.instforhemp@delphi.com>

                            The Greenleaf News
                                 Vol V, #2
                                 Publisher
                          The Institute for Hemp
                                  Editor
                              John Birrenbach
                           Contributing Writers
                                 Aswegan,
                    and the others who give great ideas
    	Vol V #2 of the Greenleaf News is published by the Institute for
Hemp. Subscription rates are 1 yr $20, 2 yrs $35, Canada add $5 per year
additional. Payable in U. S. funds.
    	The Views expressed herein are those of the writer and not
necessarily those of the publisher. The publisher does not condone the
breaking of ANY laws regardless of the ignorance of the law. The publisher
feels that ONLY if you work within the law can we change the law. Without
responsible laws we have anarchy.
    	ADVERTISING RATES:
    	This Newsletter is published using QuarkXPress*. Ads "Q READY"
receive a 5% discount. All other layout ads must be camera ready.
Discounts are available to other Cannabis reform Organizations.
    FULL PAGE 7"x10"--- $30.
    Quarter Page -------------$10.
    other sizes are acceptable.
    Classified $0.15 per word $5 min.
    	WE NEED ARTICLES:
    	We need articles for publication. If you would like to write
something DO IT and send it in. If you can submit it on a disk or a data
link that makes it easier for us to publish. WE NEED MATERIAL, got an idea
call us 612-222-2628. @ZEND
                            *******************
                               IN THIS ISSUE
                            *******************
                        Editorial
                        Paranoid Over Rope Smokers
                        LA Times Article
                        Cartoon
                        U. S. Revives Hemp Growing
                        Commodity Credit Corp to Dept of Agriculture
                        Farmers asked for Hemp Seed
                        WeedFest Report
                          ***********************
    Editorial
    Well another two months have passed since our last issue. The Last
issue was a complete success we passed out about 7,000 copies in the past
two months.
    During the past two months I have mad a number of road trips. I
actually covered 3,000 miles in the course of 30 days. Now that may not
sound like much but it was travel conducted on weekends so it was really
3,000 miles in about 8 days. During the travels I attended the Weedfest in
Chicago IL. I would like to say that as an attendee vendor at the Weedfest
I had a great time and it was great. With all due respects it made
Madison's past two fests pale by comparison. Of course it rained in
Madison the past two years and the weather in Chicago was excellent.
Thanks IMI you did a very excellent job.
    Well the Canadian situation is still under consideration. While
several crops are being grown in Ontario and in British Columbia they are
small test plots and not a revival of the industry.
    On another note it seems that Hemp is being grown experimentally on a
number of sites in the United States as well. Everyone has know for a long
time of the experiments being done at the University of Mississippi and at
the University of Indiana, its seems that there are a number of other
experiments being done elsewhere as well. We have a FOIA request pending
with the DEA and I hope that in the next few months we will get definitive
information on who else has permits as well.
    Hemp IS Victory
    John Birrenbach
    The Institute for Hemp
 
 
                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
    **************************
    GOVERNMENT STILL PARANOID OVER CRAZED ROPE SMOKERS
    (Hemp legalized but Bill C-7 increases penalties for pot possession)
    May 19/94 issue of Eye Weekly, a Toronto
    by James Harris
    Recently the federal government announced legislation that would allow
Canadian farmers to grow industrial-grade marijuana (or hemp, as it is
euphemistically referred to), that would be used to make a variety of
products, such as fabric, paper and fuel oil.
    Now, while some people may see this as a bold and intelligent
initiative on the part of a liberal-minded (pardon the pun) government, in
fact it is the result of nothing more than Ottawa trying to stay
agriculturally competitive with Europe, where hemp has been for some time,
seemingly without their streets being over-run by crazed rope smokers.
    Unfortunately, Ottawa seems less interested in keeping pace with the
Europeans when it comes to the issue of possessing marijuana for
recreational purposes. While governments in Germany, Spain, Italy Denmark
and the Netherlands have come to the inescapable conclusion that arresting
people who use marijuana does more harm than good (as well as being a
waste of taxpayers' money and police manpower), our government is trying
to turn up the heat on those Canadians who like to get high on Mother
Nature.
    On April 20, Bill C-7, the Controlled Drugs and Substances Act, was
given it's second reading in the House of Commons. Among other things
(including some really scary stuff about confiscating properties where
drugs are found), this bill would double the maximum fine for a first
offense of marijuana possession to $2000, and increase the fine for
subsequent offenses from $2000 to $5000.
    On the surface, it would almost seem as it the feds have forgotten
that the White house is now occupied by an admitted pot smoker (whose war
on crime focuses more on dead children than dead brain cells), and are
still taking their cues from George Bush and his cronies at the D. E. A.
    As it turns out, the government's motives aren't all that sinister. In
fact, it seems that what's really happening here, apart from a mild case
of the greedies, is that the government is looking to pass a bill without
having given it much thought.
    LET'S MAKE LOT'S OF MONEY
    In a conversation with Bruce Rowsell at the Ministry of Health, 'Eye'
has learned that the only reason the fines were being raised was because
the current fines were set way back in 1961, when $2000 was a lot of
money. So, when the bureaucrats sat down to write the new drug law
(perhaps after a three martini lunch), it was decided that, according to
Rowsell, 'the fine needed to be increased in order to account for
inflation'
    Instead, the bureaucrats should have said to themselves, 'Hey guys,
what we have here is a great opportunity to some good for the Canadian
public by decriminalizing marijuana. At the very least it'll save some
money in law enforcement and it would probably do a lot to reduce the
contempt for authority that seems so pervasive among the general public
these days. '
    And then perhaps another bureaucrat might have said, ' Wait, I've got
an even better idea. What if we actually legalized the stuff? We could tax
it. I mean think about it, the stuff is a weed and costs almost nothing to
grow, so we could sell it for half $15 a gram it sells for now... uh... I
mean, that's what I've heard. We'd still make a huge profit. I mean we're
talking hundreds of millions of dollars here!
    'Yeah, ' another tosdy could've said. 'I'm sure if we actually gave
the public the facts about marijuana we could get enough public support to
make this happen, and you know, now that I think about it, the LeDain
Commission estimated that there were 6 million pot smokers in Canada. If
we legalized it, just about every one of those 6 million would be so
grateful that they'd vote Liberal in the next election, and our boss would
be so grateful for that, IUm sure we'd all get promotions! '
    Unfortunately, this did not happen.
    A FINE MESS WE'RE IN
    So what Canadians are facing is a more punitive marijuana prohibition -
a prohibition that up 'til now hasn't been any more effective at stopping
Canadians from altering their realities than alcohol prohibition was.
    And, as it's usually young people living at home who get busted while
smoking outdoors (older folks can smoke at home, in private), more of them
will get sucked into the criminal justice system. And because they often
don't have the money to pay the fines (admittedly, not many people get
jail time for possessing marijuana any more), They'll go to jail for non-
payment of fines
    But fear not: there is still some hope, if not for legalization, then
at least for decriminalization. A subcommittee of the Standing House
Committee on Health is taking Bill C-7 out on the road to gauge public
reaction. Presumably, if enough people express their extreme displeasure
about the bill, something might be done about changing it. And of course,
one can always write to one's MP in Ottawa- no postage required.
    @ZEND
                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
    **************************
    Letter from Commodity Credit Corp to Dept of Agriculture
    FROM: J. B. Hutson, President Commodity Credit Corporation
    TO: The Secretary of Agriculture
    Date June 18,1942
    Subject: 1942 Agricultural Supplies Purchase and loan program:
Authority to Purchase Hempseed Harvesting Canvases and Hempseed Harvester
    In accordance with the recommendation of the War Production Board, the
Commodity Credit Corporation has proceeded to handle the entire 1942
program for the increased production of hemp, including the seed, the
fiber, the fiber mills and the harvesting machinery.
    Under your authorisation of March 5, 1942 we have entered into
contracts with Kentucky producers under which approximately 36,000 acres
have been planted to hempseed which will be delivered to the Commodity
Credit Corporation after harvesting this fall. A minimum of 12,000 acres -
all that available seed supplies will permit - have been planted to hemp
fiber in Kentucky, Wisconsin, Illinois, and Minnesota.
    J. B. Hutson, CCC
    *******************
    Farmers asked for Hemp Seed - Crop 33 Times as big as in 1941
    Information for the Press
    United States Department of Agriculture
    March 12, 1942
    Farmers are being asked by the Secretary of Agriculture this year to
increase hemp seed production by at least 33 times the 1941 production in
an effort to obtain a substantial domestic production of hemp fiber in
1943 in order to overcome shortages created by a stoppage of imports from
the Philippines and Netherlands East Indies.
    The Commodity Credit Corporation is contracting to purchase at the
price of $8 per bushel of 44 pounds - cleaned basis - hemp seed for the
1942 crop. It is expected that about 350,000 bushels of seed will be
produced for planting for fiber production in 1943.
    The offer of the Commodity Credit Corporation to purchase the seed
produced in 1942 at the guaranteed price is available only to those
growers who agree to sell their seed to the corporation. AAA farmer
committeemen will contact prospective producers in order to explain the
program to them and give them an opportunity to sign the CCC sales
agreement.
    Fiber from the American Hemp plant is the most satisfactory substitute
for Abaca, sisal, and hennequen, the three principal hard fibers used for
rope and twine whose supply has been sharply curtailed by the loss of
imports.
    Normally the United States obtains practically all (98%) of its abaca
from the Philippines and about one-half of its sisal from the Netherlands
East Indies. The remainder of its sisal requirements comes largely from
the British East Africa. Imports from the Orient are virtually stopped and
there is no assurance that imports from Africa will continue.
    The seed program will be centered in Kentucky, where conditions and
past experience appear most favorable for gaining the production goals. In
the past, the bulk of the seed has been grown in the Kentucky River Valley
in the Blue Grass Region. The usual practice is to grow seed along river
bottom land. Other areas of Kentucky and Tennessee are expected to produce
the seed as abundantly.
    Little, if any, additional equipment or machinery is needed for
handling the 1942 seed program. Farmers are expected to be able to handle
the expansion program with the equipment and machinery already on hand.
    @Zend


Article 8679 of alt.hemp:
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From: Institute for Hemp <instforhemp@delphi.com>
Newsgroups: alt.hemp
Subject: Re: GREENLEAF NEWS V5#2 Complete Text of Issue
Date: Wed, 20 Jul 94 19:56:16 -0500
Organization: Delphi (info@delphi.com email, 800-695-4005 voice)
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                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
    **************************
    INSTITUTE FOR HEMP CATALOG ON INTERNET
    If you have access to FTP you can get a copy
    of our catalog in a GIF & Text format that you can view on your home
    computer.
    FTP site info:
    FTP LOCATION: ftp. hmc. edu DIRECTORY TRAIL: /pub/drugs/marijuana/hemp
    **NOTE**
    Login on <annon> with your internet <address> for a password
    GET the file using BINARY
    Be sure to turn on HASH mode so that you know that the file is being
transferred. It is a large file (1MEG) and will take some time to
transfer.
    *********************
    U. S. REVIVES HEMP GROWING
    May 24,1942
    Information for the Press
    United States Department of Agriculture
    Note to Editors: The May 24th release date on this story is to give
you time to consider illustrating it or telling it entirely with pictures.
Eighteen news type photos are available upon request. Shots run from
soldiers guarding hemp seed (it contains a narcotic) in Kentucky warehouse
through planting, drying, hackling and spinning hemp to finished balls of
twine. Please donUt order unless you definitely plan to use. - Whitney
Tharin, Chief of Press Service.
    The U. S. Department of Agriculture is stimulating the revival of the
hemp industry in this country after a long slump. For the last 50 years
most of American needs for cordage fiber, other than cotton, have been met
by imports from the Far East.
    Hemp was grown in Kentucky as early as 1775. Its fiber went into
homespun clothes for the settlers and also into rope, twine, and sacking,
especially for cotton bales. The rigging and cables for PearyUs fleet on
Lake Erie in 1812 were made from Kentucky hemp, as were the miles of rope
New England ship builders used for tackle on the Yankee Clippers. Hangmen
preferred hemp to any other fiber because of its strength.
    By the end of the last century, domestic hemp had been crowded from
United States markets by foreign fibers - jute from India, manila from the
Philippines, sisal from the Dutch East Indies, and henequen from Mexico.
Kentucky continued to produce hemp on a relatively small scale to meet
domestic needs for cordage and twine for specialized purposes, such as
tarred marine lines and thread for sewing leather goods. Wisconsin too has
grown some and has installed new processes for cleaning and separating
fiber. Today, however, the United States, particularly the Navy, faces a
serious shortage in cables, cordage, and other things formerly made from
imported fibers, and there is not enough seed in the country to plant a
very large acreage.
    To help remedy this situation, the Department of Agriculture early in
the year bought, and later resold to Kentucky farmers, about 3,000 bushels
of hemp seed. This will be used to obtain enough seed in 1942 to plant
about 350,000 acres for fiber in Kentucky, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Illinois
and perhaps other states, in 1943. The plants from this seed, which is
being sown in rows to induce seed branching, will not be harvested until
the seed is fully developed. The fiber from these plants will be
practically worthless. For good fiber, hemp must be grown from seed sown
broadcast, to prevent branching, and must have been harvested between
blossoming and seed formation.
    Hemp plantings for seed production in 1942 will be limited to
Kentucky. Farmers there have had experience with the crop and the climate
is suited to it. Plantings for fiber production in 1942 will be limited to
Kentucky, Wisconsin, Minnesota, and Illinois. Farmers in those states have
grown hemp in the past, have at their disposal special harvesting
machines, and are near fiber processing mills. Next yearUs plantings will
be more widespread and will require the erection of a large number of
processing plants and the training of additional plant operators.
    @ZEND
                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
**************************
    Windy City WeedFest report 1.
    From: <maxwell@deep-13. gizmo. com>
    Date: 23 May 94
    The IMI's Windy City WeedFest '94, held at Chicago's Lincoln Park
Cricket Hill site between Montrose and Wilson streets was well attended
despite over- cast weather and forecasts of late afternoon rain and
thunderstorms. Attendance was up over last year's five thousand with
between ten and fifteen thousand people enjoying the event.
    WCWF'94 began promptly at noon, and ran until approx. 10 p. m. Musical
guests included The Occupants, Whit's Improv, Monkey Chow, El Magnifico,
Hairball Willie, The Frames and others.
    Speakers included Green Panthers! national coordinator Terri Mitchell,
Weed- stock organizer Ben Masel, High Times Freedom Fighter of the Year
Adam Brooke, High Times columnist Chef Ra, former Illinois Democratic
gubernatorial candi- date James Gierach, Illinois Libertarian
gubernatorial Lt. Governor candidate Bob Moldenhauer, the Illinois
Libertarian candidate for Secretary of State, a representative from
Cannabis Action Network, Institute for Hemp director John Birrenbach, and
IMI members Doctor Mike, Brian Pearson and Wendy Allen Ayers. I took the
stage only long enough to officially open the rally.
    Between twenty and thirty vendors attended the rally, selling t-
shirts, literature, novelty smoking equipment, hemp goods, jewelry, toys,
stickers etc.
    An independant artist donated an 15 foot pot leaf statue made to the
proportions of our rally flier's design and planted it on top of the hill
where it was visible from Lake Shore Drive.
    The City of Chicago treated us well, with zero uniformed police
officers present, and as usual, ZERO ARRESTS. There were no acts of
violence.
    After the rally, IMI organizers and rally attendees stayed until well
after midnight picking up trash and left the park in good condition. IMI
is one of the few users of the Chicago Park system which cleans up after
itself.
    The rally was a financial success (we made more money than we spent)
and we sold out of all our rally shirts and other merchandise. We signed
up new members, although not nearly as many as I'd hoped for. Tribune
broadcasting's CLTV set up a live remote and ran an interviews with myself
and other organizers, and WLS-TV (ch.7, ABC) did at least a drive-by of
the event. There may have been press reporters there, but I'm unaware of
any, nor of any subsequent press accounts.
    That covers the basics.
    herbally. max
    coordinator, Illinois Marijuana Initiative.
                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
    **************************
    A BUDDING INDUSTRY MAY TAKE ROOT IN CANADA: HEMP
    OFFICIALS CONSIDER LEGALIZING MARIJUANA CROP FOR PROCESSING
    INTO PAPER, ROPE, BUILDING MATERIALS.
    Los Angeles Times (LT) - MONDAY May 16, 1994
    By: CRAIG TURNER; TIMES STAFF WRITER
    TILLSONBURG, Canada - Joe Strobel dreams marijuana dreams.
    Wait, it's not what you think.
    In Strobel's dream, the tobacco fields sloping up from the north shore
of Lake Erie--his fields and those of his neighbors--are patched with
dense stands of Cannabis sativa ruffling in the wind. And it's all legal.
    The Canadian government is poised to make Strobel's dream come true,
perhaps as early as this summer.
    For Strobel's marijuana--or hemp, as he prefers to call it--would be
so low in THC (tetrahydrocannabinol), the active ingredient in pot, that
no one could get high smoking it. Instead, Strobel and the 11 other
Ontario farmers in his consortium plan to sell their hemp fiber for
processing into paper, rope, building materials and maybe even shirts and
caps.
    These would-be hemp growers, and others like them from the Great Lakes
to the Canadian Rockies, are beneficiaries of a surging international
movement on behalf of low-THC hemp, powered by an unlikely coalition of
environmentalists, entrepreneurs, farmers and, yes, advocates of legalized
pot.
    Canadian officials are listening. The ruling Liberal Party is
sponsoring legislation that would license hemp growing throughout Canada.
    "Farmers in Canada are very interested in it. It's an excellent
commercial and industrial type of crop. It's high in fiber, it's an
excellent alternative to (growing) tobacco. . . . It has a great deal of
potential, " Health Minister Diane Marleau said in an interview.
    She said the bill, which would closely regulate hemp growers, could
get final approval in the House of Commons this year and then would go to
the Canadian Senate.
    Canada would follow a number of European and Asian countries, most
recently Britain, in legalizing cultivation of low-THC hemp.
    Advocates of the plant, often sporting "Hemp Can Save the Planet"
buttons, get rapturous about its attributes.
    Not only is it the environmentally correct alternative to lumber and
wood pulp, they say, but you can cook with hemp oil, fabricate it into
particle board, combine it with old plastic milk containers and mold it
into two-by-fours, burn it as fuel, feed the seeds to your pet and even
make it into, ahem, cigarette paper.
    "This will grow anywhere, all the way from Canada down to most of the
U. S., if not all of the U. S. This is the finest thing we could be
growing to replace forest, " enthused George Tyson, general manager of
Xymax 2001, a Montrose, Kan., company that has contracted with Strobel's
farmers to convert hemp fiber into building material. "It's the
environmental answer, and it's the agriculture answer. "
    Those on the business end of the budding hemp industry are more
circumspect. While acknowledging the attractions of low-THC hemp, they say
the economics of growing and processing it on a large scale in North
America today remain unproven.
    The leading hemp processor in Britain still sells it mainly to stables
as horse bedding.
    But there is no shortage of interest among Canada's recession-pummeled
farmers. Fiona Briody, director of an Alberta crop development association
that has a hemp license request pending, has been astonished by the number
of growers in Western Canada seemingly ready to try it.
    Among the backers of legalizing hemp here are the Sierra Club of
Eastern Canada, other environmental organizations, a handful of
enthusiastic grass-roots organizations and a few adventuresome business
people.
    But Strobel, a lively, 65-year-old retired physical education teacher,
has become the hemp movement's top salesman. He brings to the crusade the
kind of bouncy enthusiasm that once led him to develop a fitness program
called the Health Hustle, which has been adopted by schools throughout
Canada and in parts of the United States.
    "Let's face it, we farmers have an economic problem, and this might be
an out, so people are pretty receptive, " he said, sitting in the dining
room of the spacious Tillsonburg, Ontario, home that serves as Hemp
Headquarters, Canada. "We know it can be grown here because it's been
grown here before, (and) . . . the potential is about unlimited. Somewhere
it will pay off. "
    Strobel retired from teaching seven years ago and began devoting all
his time to the family tobacco farm, about 85 miles southwest of Toronto.
    Tobacco remains profitable, he said, but needs to be grown in rotation
with other crops. Strobel and his wife, Judith, tried a variety of
alternatives, but "nothing really paid off. It pays the taxes and nothing
else, so we were looking for something. "
    Last year, that something turned out to be hemp.
    Since then, Strobel's quest has taken him around Canada and into the
United States.
    He has rummaged through abandoned warehouses in Kentucky where hemp
was grown legally in the 1940s as a wartime measure, compiled back issues
of High Times magazine, collected hemp paper with marijuana leaf
watermarks and picked through records and photos of early 20th-Century
Canadian hemp cultivation.
    Now he speaks with confidence about potential crop yields, prices per
acre and transit costs.
    Because the bill before Parliament will not pass in time for planting
season this year, Strobel's consortium, using existing law, has asked for
an experimental license to grow 18 acres of hemp in scattered locations
near Tillsonburg.
                       The Greenleaf News Vol V, #2
                     Publisher The Institute for Hemp
                          Editor John Birrenbach
    **************************
 
LA TIMES ARTICLE part 2
 
    They hope to harvest 80 tons and have reached agreement with
processors in Canada and the United States for production of a variety of
products. Other, similar proposals are pending from elsewhere in Canada,
including Alberta.
    They await final approval by the Bureau of Dangerous Drugs of Health
Canada, which grants a handful of licenses annually, mainly for academic
and law enforcement research.
    While Strobel acknowledged the debt he owes to the pro-pot crowd, who
turned him on to the potential of hemp in the first place, he stressed
that the kind of cannabis that he wants to grow should not be confused
with what he calls "the happy stuff. "
    Although it is of the same species, cannabis grown for hemp has been
specially developed in Europe through selective breeding.
    The main difference is the low-THC factor of commercial stocks. The
pending law in Canada would call for testing seeds and plants to ensure a
THC content no higher than 0.3%. THC concentrations in marijuana generally
range from about 3% to more than 5%, according to the U. S. National
Institute on Drug Abuse.
    Nonetheless, Stuart Carpenter, director of Hemcore Ltd. in Essex,
England, Britain's major processor, said hemp farmers there have
occasional problems with night raiders snipping cuttings from low-THC
plants and presumably peddling them as marijuana seedlings.
    Those who want to legalize the drug say they back the hemp movement
out of environmental concerns and the assumption that acceptance of
legalized, low-THC hemp eventually will erode the ban on the high-THC
variety.
    The law that would authorize growth of low-THC hemp would also toughen
penalties for marijuana use.
    Participation of the pro-pot crowd has caused some political obstacles
and awkward moments.
    Ken Masse, 44, who farms 1,800 acres of peas, wheat, barley and oats
in central Alberta, and is applying for a license to grow an experimental
hemp plot, said, "What we really need is a name change, because as soon as
you say hemp, people think of marijuana and half the population gets up in
arms. "
    Hemp originated in Asia and is known to have grown in China as early
as 2800 BC. For most of history it mainly has been used as a source for
rope, twine and canvas; a 1943 U. S. government film, now gleefully
exhibited by marijuana advocates, notes that the rope, sails and rigging
of "our beloved Old Ironsides" were made from hemp.
    The crop was legally grown in the United States and Canada until the
1930s, when it was banned in both countries as an illicit drug.
    Hemp was briefly grown under license in the United States during World
War II when the Japanese overran most hemp-growing countries, interrupting
the U. S. supply.
    Canadian environmentalists were first attracted to hemp as an
alternative to lumbering, a considerable lure in a country that still
permits clear cutting of old-growth forest. But the Establishment patina
of agriculture and business have lent invaluable credibility to a movement
that still carries a lingering whiff of counterculture.
    Larry Duprey, president of a 23-year-old Montreal-based fashion
accessory distribution firm, is importing hemp fabric and making caps,
shirts and other clothing.
    Carpenter, the British hemp processor, began contracting with English
growers mainly for horse bedding, but his company is moving into hemp
paper and textiles.
    He noted that "it's an extremely difficult crop to process. We've had
to develop our own specialty machinery. "
    Briody, the Alberta farm official, said that after studying the crop
in the Netherlands, Romania and Russia, "the yields definitely aren't what
some people say. "
    But Briody said farmers in the association are undeterred.
    As Gar Knutson, a Liberal member of Parliament from Ontario who
supports legalization and licensing of low-THC hemp, put it: "Agriculture
has been so bad anyway, what do we have to lose by trying out hemp for a
while? "
    @ZEND


