Pubdate: Wed, 16 Dec 2015 Source: Washington Post (DC) Copyright: 2015 The Washington Post Company Contact: http://www.washingtonpost.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/491 Author: Ben Terris WHERE POT IS THE LIFE OF THE PARTY IN WASHINGTON Marijuana parties in Washington just aren't what they used to be, and Keith Stroup is pleased about that. They used to be wild, illicit affairs, held in word-of-mouth locations with off-the-record agreements. Stroup, the wild-eyed, long-haired, wire-rimmed-glasses-wearing founder of the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws, often acted as host. He lost his NORML job once, after outing President Jimmy Carter's drug czar for purportedly snorting cocaine at the organization's 1977 Christmas party. This week, High Times magazine-founded by a legendary pot smuggler who also bankrolled the 1974 launch of NORML- threw a gala dinner to celebrate innovators in the pot business. They did it at the Washington Hilton - home to the White House Correspondents' Association dinner and the National Prayer Breakfast - in a city that recently legalized marijuana for recreational use. "It's a great time to be alive if you're a marijuana advocate," Stroup said, sipping white wine before taking his seat at a plated feast featuring crab, shrimp, medium-rare steak and creme brulee. Pot is legal in some form in 23 states, and nine states will vote on legalizing recreational marijuana in 2016. Milling around the ballroom Monday night were the prophets of the new pot kingdom: old revolutionaries, entrepreneurs in suits, dudes sporting Army fatigues and facial tattoos, bearded guys who used to sneak bong rips in their parents' basement but now pay 30 percent taxes on their now-legal product, and at least one young woman in a cocktail dress hoping the industry will follow her lead into professionalism. "I want to change the stereotype away from the hippie mentality," said Allyson Feiler, who owns seven shops in Colorado, moonlights as a consultant and is spinning off franchises of her Green Tree Medicinals. "Of course, the first group of people were doing it illegally at first, but now that it's been legal, we'll see a shift in quality." "I used to grow . . . tomatoes," confided her table mate Jeremy Heidl, co-owner of a company that makes vaporizers. "Really . . . strong . . . hydroponic . . . tomatoes." The walls were splashed bright red, punctuated by the white silhouettes of marijuana leaves. A DJ played in the corner, while neon-blue lights flickered around the room - pen-shaped vaporizers being put to use at each table. Just because it is legal to smoke in Washington doesn't mean it's okay to smoke in the Washington Hilton. But that wouldn't keep this High Times crowd from indulging. "We had a problem in our hotel room because we somehow set off the fire alarm," said a squat man with a flat-brimmed baseball cap named Marcus Lentz. "We put a shower cap over the smoke alarm. It's never been a problem before." Lentz was here as a founder of the group Medi Bros, an edibles manufacturing company from Oregon. He used to be a high school teacher-yes, very "Breaking Bad," but he insists he was probably more Jesse Pinkman than Heisenberg. "I was the worst teacher ever," he said. "I taught home economics. I would just try out the kids' cookies and go smoke a joint in the back." Now he has a Trail Blazers award from High Times. "Marijuana is becoming mainstream, but we still think of ourselves as an outlaw magazine," said Dan Skye, the mustachioed editor in chief of High Times. "There are still people going to jail for using." But folks such as Skye who have been at this a long time realize that momentum is on their side. Gone are the days when High Times would worry that such a party would be broken up by police. "We spend most of our time arguing about legal limits or whether employers can fire people for using," Stroup said, standing outside of the dinner. "It's a real luxury." Take Jeremy Moberg, who had come to the event to receive one of the 50-some-odd Trail Blazer awards for his pioneering work as an outdoor cannabis grower. Industrial pot producers face a daunting number of regulations if they want to grow outside, but Moberg argues that indoor production is a huge drain on electricity that draws mites and pests. "We're kind of the free-range chicken of cannabis," he said. Stroup had to laugh. It wasn't long ago that the world had less fancy names for what Moberg does. "You guys are what we used to call smugglers," he joked. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom