‘It’s A Serious Degree’
In the context of the state of academia at present, that's probably not too wrong.
Meanwhile, China cranks out electrical, mechanical, software, and nuclear engineers at an amazing pace.
I don't think they teach Marijuana Studies at colleges in China, or India, or Iran.
But there is NO MONEY in the above fields compared to Americas ZEST FOR DRUGS!!!
GALLOWAY TOWNSHIP, N.J. (CBS) — Colleges are now adding cannabis to their curriculum. Grace DeNoya is used to getting snickers when people learn she’s majoring in marijuana.
“My friends make good-natured jokes about getting a degree in weed,” said DeNoya, one of the first students in a new four-year degree program in medicinal plant chemistry at Northern Michigan University. “I say, ‘No, it’s a serious degree, a chemistry degree first and foremost. It’s hard work. Organic chemistry is a bear.'”
As a green gold rush in legal marijuana and its non-drug cousin hemp spreads across North America, a growing number of colleges are adding cannabis to the curriculum to prepare graduates for careers cultivating, researching, analyzing and marketing the herb.
(Excerpt) Read more at philadelphia.cbslocal.com
In the context of the state of academia at present, that's probably not too wrong.
Meanwhile, China cranks out electrical, mechanical, software, and nuclear engineers at an amazing pace.
I don't think they teach Marijuana Studies at colleges in China, or India, or Iran.
But there is NO MONEY in the above fields compared to Americas ZEST FOR DRUGS!!!
GALLOWAY TOWNSHIP, N.J. (CBS) — Colleges are now adding cannabis to their curriculum. Grace DeNoya is used to getting snickers when people learn she’s majoring in marijuana.
“My friends make good-natured jokes about getting a degree in weed,” said DeNoya, one of the first students in a new four-year degree program in medicinal plant chemistry at Northern Michigan University. “I say, ‘No, it’s a serious degree, a chemistry degree first and foremost. It’s hard work. Organic chemistry is a bear.'”
As a green gold rush in legal marijuana and its non-drug cousin hemp spreads across North America, a growing number of colleges are adding cannabis to the curriculum to prepare graduates for careers cultivating, researching, analyzing and marketing the herb.
(Excerpt) Read more at philadelphia.cbslocal.com