Pubdate: Thu, 04 Sep 2003 Source: Monday Magazine (CN BC) Copyright: 2003 Monday Publications Contact: http://mondaymag.com/monday/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1150 Author: Andrew MacLeod Cited: Camosun College http://www.camosun.bc.ca/ Hempology 101 http://www.hempology.com/ Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Ted+Smith (Ted Smith) CAMOSUN CLIPS CANNABIS CONCERT Camosun College shut down a student club's recent pro-cannabis concert on the Lansdowne campus, leading organizers to say the show was nipped because it was about bud. The August 24 concert, held outside Camosun's Fisher Building, was organized by the college's Hempology 101 club. Founder Ted Smith, a much-prosecuted local pro-pot activist, says, "We thought this would have been within the mandate of the club and wouldn't be a problem." But opening act Smoked Out Brainzzz had only played for about 20 minutes, he says, before a campus security guard pulled the plug on their sound equipment. The guards then cancelled the show. The rest of the lineup, Zolabud and The Sweathogs, never made it onto the stage to perform for the crowd of 40 to 50 people. "It seemed like they were bringing up a lot of excuses and reasons," says Smith. One security guard was particularly aggressive even though the scene was peaceful, he adds, and speculates that the guards may have been reacting more to the club's pro-pot stance than to what was actually happening. "I think a lot of it had to do with the club. I think a lot of other groups would be able to have a gathering like that without the resistance that we got." Calls to Camosun's security department were forwarded to the media relations department, where spokesperson Michelle Tinis said any group holding a similar event would be treated the same. She advises students planning events to contact the physical resources department for help in getting the necessary approvals and permits. "The students had not officially informed the College they were going to have a band," says Tinis, who did not witness the event. "They also didn't have a liquor license . . . [The guards] were worried it was going to explode . . . As far as I know it was reported people were both serving beer, drinking beer and smoking pot." Later she called back to clarify. "There was a table set up and beverages were being served, but the students said it was iced tea, but [the guards] did observe the person behind the table serving it drinking a beer." The guards did not check what was in the cups, she says. Smith says the event was explicitly alcohol-free. What about pot smoking? "I think there was some of that going on, but it certainly wasn't me," says Smith. This is Victoria, he adds, and people smoke weed all over the place with growing social acceptance. "It's a different world now," he says, citing the pending decriminalization of pot possession, a marijuana-positive senate report and a number of recent court decisions. "Now the things I do and say are more often being accepted and embraced by everyone not in a uniform." - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake