Files
crop-chem-docs/corpus/epa_ppls/241-325.md
T
justin a97107de46
Image rebuild (skip scrape) / build (push) Failing after 1h37m12s
docker: production image + Gitea Actions for monthly refresh
Dockerfile: self-contained image with corpus + Chroma + BM25 baked
in. Drawbar's compose pulls + runs without volume mounts. Built from
sources.json (labels schema), PRODUCT_NAME=crop_chem by default,
HYBRID_SEARCH=true (always-on for production quality). RERANK_URL +
OLLAMA_URL get set at compose time.

.gitea/workflows/refresh.yml: monthly cron (1st @ 06:00 UTC) does
full scrape → reindex → image push. Scrapes Bayer (~30 min) +
EPA PPLS row-crop filtered (~7h). Skips reindex+push if no corpus
diff. Tags pushed: :latest, :<sha12>, :corpus-<YYYY.MM.DD>.

.gitea/workflows/image-only.yml: on-demand or auto on code-only
pushes to main (paths: docs_mcp/, rag/, scrape/, requirements.txt,
Dockerfile, sources.json). Reindexes from committed corpus, builds
image, pushes. ~10 min vs ~9h full refresh.

.gitignore: corpus/ now COMMITTED (4,159 labels, 265 MB of .md +
sidecars). Lets image-only.yml rebuild indexes without re-scraping.
chroma/ + bm25/ still gitignored (regenerable binary indexes).

.dockerignore: drops venv, eval results, PLAN/README/CLAUDE.md,
deploy/, .git/ — keeps the image lean. corpus + chroma + bm25
explicitly NOT in dockerignore (those go INTO the image).

Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.7 (1M context) <noreply@anthropic.com>
2026-05-24 12:32:41 -04:00

24 KiB
Raw Blame History

PASSPORT HERBICIDE


• a MS. Desiree L. Litte American Cyanamide Compny P.O. oOK 400 Princeton, NJ oa4J-0400 Oear MS. Little: SUDJect: PAS&PORTe ilerbicide MAR I 6 1900 ePA Reylgteatlon NO. l41-325 Allcation Dated September 20, 1993, Regest tor ' Hince Label Amelldments TIle ;.'roosed amendments to thE' labelin~ ot H,e sUbJect pesticiue proouct reyistration nave been reviHed and are accetaule uncer the Feoeral Insectlcide, Fungicide and Maenticiue Act (FIFkA) as amentieJ provided tnat you: o ;-;uomit one (l) copy ot jiOUr f inal r lntec li:lbellll', oetorE you rledse the r0duct (or snIrment unter nIt' aCCf';:;t t'll lac..elin',. • J II tnl;; ccn<iition i not COlnrll''',-; ',/ith, the re-;1t:tri1tiofl lll c SUbject to cancellation in uccorddncp ith flfA, sectln O(). lour r.lea~e tor soip.eot of the proGuct con- stitutes acceptance of this condition. .. A 5r·~~u cc~y cf tIle laDelln,; 15 pnclosen tor your r·!ord • f.nclol)ure SIncerely YOUCb, Joanne 1. Miller ~roduct Manager (i) fungicide-Herbicide branCh Reg16tration ivi5ion (750C) E.riilson: Uiskette ABC16 03-16-95 BEST COpy AVAILABLE

\ ) ) ACTIVE INGREDIENTS: PASSPORt8 herbicide FOR USE IN SOYBEANS Ammonium sKlt of imazethap)r: (±)-2-[4,S-dihydro-4-methyl-4-(1-methyl­ et:hyl)-S-oxo-l!!-imidazol-2-ylj-S-p.thyl-3-pyridinecarboxylic add* triflualin:,~~trifluoro-2,6-dinitro-N,N-dipropyl-p-toluidine INERT INGREDIENTS** . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 2.2t 27 .S% 70.3% TOTAL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 100.0% *Equivalent to 2.1% (±)-2-[4,5-dihydro-4-methyl-4-(l-methylethyl)-S-oxo-l!!­ imidazol-2-ylj-S-ethyl-3-pyridlnecarboxylic acid. **Contains petroleum distillates PASSPORT contains 2.6 pounds of active ingredients per gallon (2.4 pounds ai of trifluralin and 0.2 pounds acid equivalent of imazethapyr). EPA Reg. No. 241-325 EPA Est. No. KEEP OUT OF REACH OF CHILDREN DANGER/PELIGRO! PRECAUCION AL USUARIO: Si usted no lee ingles, no use este producto hasta que la etiqueta Ie haya sido explicada ampliamente. STATEMENT OF PRACTICAL TREATMENT IF IN EYES: Hold eyelids open and flush with a steady, gentle steam of water for 15 minutes. Call a physician. IF SWALLOWED: DO NOT induce vomiting. Call a physician or Poison Control Center immediately. IF ON SKIN: .lash with plenty of soap and water. irritation persists. Get medical attention if NOTE TO PHYSICIAN: Because of inreased risk of chemical pneumonia or pulmonary edema caused by aspiration of the hydrocarbon solvent, vomiting should be induced only ur.der professional supervision. In case of an emergency endangering I ife or property involving this product. call collect, day or night, Area Code 20l-83-3100. See Next Page for Additional Precautionary Statements American Cyanamid Company Agricultural Products Civision Crop Protection Chemicals Department .layne, NJ 07470 °1993 Net Contents: 2.5 gallons ...... ) (9.45 liters) ,. • Registered Trademark of Americ·<~n Cyanamid Com;J<1ny

  • I . 6/91 . .1') J ,. r

PRECAUTIONARY STATEMENTS HAZARDS TO HUMANS (AND DOMESnC ANlt'ALS) DANGER Causes i r.revers ible eye damage. HRrmful if swallowed, inhaled 0"(" absol through skin. Do n(,t bet in eyes, Con skin, or on clothing. Wear goggles face shield. Avoid breathin b vapor or spray Jaist. Wash thoroughly with, and water afer handling. Remcve contaminated cothing and wash before reus. ENVIRONMENTAL hAZAR,)S This product is toxic to fish. Do not ply directly o water, or to areas wI surface watr is present or to inectdal areas below the mean high water Jal Drift and CUI'off frnm t::eated al:eas Jaay be hazardous to fish in neighbol aquatiC'. sites. DO NOT contauinate wat .. r when disposin of e'luipllent washwat. DIREe'fIONS FOR USE It is a violati"" of Federal law to use th! s product in 2 manner inconsis' ) with its labeling. ) This label must be in the possession of the user at the time of pesti. applicatio. Observe all cautions and limitations in this leaflet. Do I'ot use PASSPORT ' than in accordance with t!-le instructions sP.t :orth on this label. The us, PASSPORT not consistent with this label can result in inju=y to crops, an;m, or persons. Keep container closed to avoid spills and contamination. DO NOT appl.y this product through any type of irrigation system. STORAGE: STORAGE AND DXSPOSLL KEEP FROM FREEZING. DO NOT STORE BELOW 400 F. SHAKE wELL BEFO USING. DO NOT co.ltaminM:e water, food or feed by s::orage or disposal. PESTICIDE DISPOSAL: Pesticide wastes are acutely hazardous. Improp disposal of excess pesticide, spray mixture, or rinsa is a violation of Federal law. If these wastes cannot disposed of by use according to label instruction contact your State Pesticide or Environmental Contr Agp.ncy or the Hazardous Waste representative at t nearest EPA Regional Office for guidance. CONTAINER DISPOSAL: Triple rinse (or equivalent). Then offer for rccycli or reconditioning. or puncture and dispose of i'l sanitary landfi 11, or by incineration, or, :'f a11",e9. State and local authorities, by burning. Ii burned.:~t out of smoke.

  • 2- 6/91

.) ) DISCLAIMER The label instructions for the use of this product reflect the opinion of experts based On research and field use. The directions are believed to be reI iable and should be followed carefully. However, it is impossible to eliminate all risks inherently associated with use of this product. Crop inj'ry, ineffectiveness or other unintended consequences may result because of such factors as weather conditions, presence of other materials, herbicide resistant weed populations, or the use of, or application of the product contrary to label instructions, all of which are beyond the control of American Cyanamid Company. All such risks shall be assumed by the user. American Cyanamid Company shall not be responsible for losses or damages resulting from use of this product in any manner not set forth on this label. User assUllles all risks associated with the use of tllis product in any manner not specifically set forth on this label. American Cyanamid Company warrants only that the material contained herein conforms to the chemical description on the label and is reasonably fit for the use therein described when used in accordance with the directions for use, subject to the risks referred to above. CYANID DOES NOT MAKE OR AUTHORIZE ANY AGENT OR REPRESENTATIVE TO MAKE ANY OTHER VARRANTIES, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED AND EXPRESSLY l{CLUDES AND DISCLAIMS ALL IMPLIED VARRANTIES OF MERCTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. BUYER'S EXCLUSIVE REMEDY AND AMERICAN CYANAMID'S EXCLUSIVE LIABILITY, VHETHER IN CONTRACT, TORT, NEGLIGENCE, STRICT LIABILITY OR OTHERVISE, SHALL BE LIMITED TO REPAYMENT OF THE PURCHASE PRICE OF PASSPORT. In no case shall Cyanamid or the 5cller b liable for consequential, special or indirect damages resulting from the use or handling of this product USES WIH OTHER PRODUCTS (TANK MIXES) If this product is used in combination witn any other product except as specifically recommended in writing by American Cyanamid Company then American Cyanamid Company shall have no liability for any loss, damage or injury arising out of its use in any such combination not so specifically recommpnded. If used en combinatim recommended by American Cyanamid Company, the liability of American Cyanamid Company shall in no manner extend to any damage, loss or injury not directly caused by the inclusion of the American Cyanamid Ccmpany product in such combination use, and in any event shall be limited to return of the account of the purchase price of the American Cyanamid Company product. GENEPAL INFORMATION Entry into treated fiElds is not permitted without protective clothing until sprays have drid. PASSPORT is ,,:fective in providing weed control in redu.ced tillage (fie.t,h' not tilled the previous fall) as well as conventional tillage production sy~~~~s. Apply PASSPORT preplant i.ncorporated from ',5 days prior to planting, uP. to planting. Incorporate t'AssrORT within 24 hours of application. p;f'.cr PAS"PORT is appl i"d, some suscepttble weeds .. mcrg£", growth stops, W1(1 '"he weeds either die or are not competitive with th. crop . . ). ., .... , , , . ..... ,

<,--..1, S '-' C:::1r The weed killing activity of PASSPORT involves herbicide uptake by weed roots and rapid translocation to the growing points. Therefore, adequate soil moisture is important for optimum PASSPORT activity. When adequate soil moisture is present, PASSPORT will provide residual control of susceptible germinating weeds. Occa3ional internode shortening and/or temporary yellowing of soybean plants may occur following PASSPORT applications. This will not affect soybean yields. Use of PASSPORT herbicide in accordance with label directions is expected to result in normal growth of rotational crops in most situations; however, various environmental and agronollic factors make it impossible to eliminate all risks associated with the use of this product "nd, therefore, rotational crop injury is always possible. Within any weed population, there may be the potential for the occurrence of weeds resistant to herbicides .. hen compounds that affect the same site of action are used continously on the same acre. Therefore, any multiple year weed management program should include, when local agronomic practices allow, ) as many of the following practices as possible: ) use scouting and weed thresholds to determine the need for herbicide treatment utilize tank-mixtures or sequential applications of d~L[erent mode­ of-action herbicides to control the same target weeds combine cultivation with herbicide treatments See your Cyanamid representative for additional information. Replanting: If replanting is necessary in a field previously treated with PASSPORT, the field may be replanted to soybeans. Rework the soil no deeper than the treated zone. Do not apply a second treatment of PASSPORT. MIXING I:1STRUCTIONS Fill the spray tank one-fourth to one-half full with clean water. While agitating add the required amount of product and then fill the remainder of the tank with water. Maintain agitation while spraying to ensure a uniform spray mixture. To avoid injury to sellsitive crops, spray equipment used for PASSPORT applications must be drained and thoroughly cleaned with water be:ore being used to apply other products. TANK MIX COMBINATIONS WITH OTHER HERBICIDES If other herbic ides are tank-mixed with PASSPORT, whi Ie agi tating, add components in the following order:

  1. Fill spray tank 1/4 to 1/2 full with clean water.
  2. Add PASSPORT.
  3. Add other EC (emulsifiable concentrate) products.
  4. Add soluble packet products and thoroughly mix.
  5. Add WP (wettable powder), DG (dispersible r.rat.u]cs) or OF (dry flowable) formulations not in soluble packets.
  6. Add aqueous solution products.
  7. Add liquid dispersible products.
  8. While ap;itatinp;, fi 11 the remainder of the t~nk with water. 6/91

) ) HERBICIDE COKBINATIONS PASSPORT may be applied preplant incorporated in tank mix combination with metribuzin (Scncor 1 or Lcxone 2 ) PASSPORT may also be applied preplant incorporated, followed by a preemergence application of metribuzin or linuron (Lorox 2 or Linex 3 ). The tank mix or sequential application of PASSPORT and metribuzin will enhance the control of common cocklebur and common ragweed in addition to the weeds controlled by a soil application of PASSPORT. The sequential application of PASSPORT followed by linuron will enhance the control of common ragweed. Apply PASSPORT at the broadcast rate of 2 1/2 pints per acre. Refer to the metribuzin or linuron label for specIfic application rates. cestrictions and precautionary instructions. Under conditions of heavy grass pressure. the addition of a grass herbicide such as PROWL- or trifluralin may be tank-mixed with PASSPORT. When PASSPORT is used in combination with another herbicide, refer to the respective label for rates. methods of application, proper timing, weeds contro lled, restrictions and precautions. Always use in accordance with the more restrictive label restrictions and precautions. No label dosages should be exceeded. PASSPORT cannot be mixed with any product containing a label prohibiting such mixtures. SPRAYING INSTRUCTIONS DO NOT apply when wind velocity is greater than 10 mph, or when spray may be carried to sensitive crops. Sensitive crops include leafy vegetables, sugarbeets, and cotton. GROUND APPLICATIONS: Uniformly apply with properly calibrated gr,)Und equipment in 10 to 40 gallons 0~ water per acre. A spray pressure of 20 to 40 psi is recommended. Adjust the boom height to ensure proper coverage. APPLICATIONS WITH LIQUID FERTILIZER: PASSPORT can be applied to the soil in liquid fertilizers. Follow all PASSPORT label recommendations regarding incorporation, timing of application, special instructions and precautions. Apply treatments in 20 or more gallons of liquid fertilizer per acre with ground equipmer.t. Always test the compatibility of PASSPORT with liquid fertilizer before mixing in the spray tank. ·PROWL is a registered trademark of American Cyanamid Company. lSencor is a trademark of Hobay Corporation. 2texone and Lorox are trademarks of E.I. duPont de Nemours and Company. 3Linex is a trademark of Griffin Ag Products Co., Inc.

  • 5 - 6/91

) APPLICATIONS WITH DRY BULK FERTILIZER: PO\SSPORT .. ay be illpregnated on dry bulk fertilizers. directed, PASSPORT/dry bulk fertilizer .. ixtures provide to that provided by the same rates of PASSPORT applied fertilizer. \lhen applied as weed control equal in water or liquid Follow all PASSPORT label reco .... endations regarding application and incorporation, special instructions and precautions. Apply PASSPORT/dry bulk fertilizer mixtures only with ground equipment. All individual state cegulations relating to dry bulk fertilizer, registration, labeling, and application are the responsibility of the individual and/or co"r,any selling the PASSPORT/dry bulk fertilizer .. ixturas. A .. inimum of 200 pounds and a maximum of 450 pounds of dry bulk fertilizer impregnated with the recommended amount of PASSPORT must be applied per acre. DO NOT impregnate PASSPORT onto coated ammonium nitrate or limestone because these materials will not absorb the herbicide. Dry fertilizer blends containing mixtures of ammonium nitrate or limestone may be impregnated with PASSPORT. A minimum of 200 pounds of impregnated dry bulk fertilizer, excluding the weight of ammonium nitrate or limestone. must be applied per acre. Apply PASSPORT at the rate of 2 and 1/2 pints per acre. Use the following table to determine the amount of PASSPORT to be impregnated on a ton of dry bulk fertilizer based on the rate of fertilize~ which will be applied per acre. RATE CHART FOR IMPREGNATION OF DRY BULK FERTILIZER WITH PASSPORT (Pints of PASSPORT per Ton of Fertilizer) PASSPORT Rate Fertilizer Rate Per Acre pounds per acre Pints per Ton 2 1/2 pints 200 25 250 20 300 16 2/3 350 14 1/3 400 12 1/2 450 11 For those rates not listed in this table. calculate the pints of PASSPORT to be impregnated on a ton of dry bulk fertilizer using the following formula: 2000 Pounds of dry fertilizer per acre x 2 1/2 Pints of PASSPORT per acre (recommended rate) ·6· Pints of , .• PASSPORT per' .:.,' ton of fertilizer. 6/93 .... , .. , .. ' . ?

To impregnate PASSPORT on bulk fertilizer, use a closed rotary-drum mixer or other cOlIIDonly used dry bl:.lk fertilizer blender equipped with suitable spray equipment. Spray nozzles must be placed to provide unifor'll coveragu of PASSPORT onto the fertilizer during mixing. If Treflan is to be combined with the PASSPORT prior to impregnation, premix the Treflan with an equal volume of water before adding it to the PASSPORT. DO NOT mix undiluted Treflan with PASSPORT. Apply the PASSPORT/dry bulk fertilizer mixture with an accurately calibrated dry fertilizer spreader. The PASSPORT/dry bulk fertilizer mixture must be spread uniformly on the soil surface. Uneven spreading can cause poor weed control and crop injury. Refer to PREPLANT INCORPORATED APPLICATIONS section of this label for incorporation directions. PASSPORT HERBICIDE USE AREA Do not apply PASSPORT to soybeans in North Dakota or in Minnesota north of ) state highway 210. ) USE RATE (2 1/2 PINTS P!':p. ACRE) Apply PASSPORT at a broadcast rate of 2 1/2 pints per acre. At this broadcast rate, one gallon of PASSPORT will treat 3.2 acres of soybeans. NOTE: Only one application of PASSPORT may be made during the season. YEF.DS CONTROLLED When applied as directed, PASSPORT will control or reduce competition from the weeds listed below. NOTE: C = Control, R = Reduced Competition ...... . . .,. . , ..... . ..... , .. I -

BROADLEAF WEEDS ~X'S .I ~ ! Preplant Weeds Controlled Incorporated Anoda, spurred C Buffalobur C Carpetweed C Cocklebur, cOlDlllon R Devilsclaw C Calinsoga C Jimsonweed C Kochia C Lambquarters, cOlllJllon C Mallow, Venice R Morningglory entireleaf R ivyleaf R pitted R ) smallflower C tall R Mustard species C Nightsh3c1e black C Eastern black C hairy C Pigweed palmer C redroot C smooth C spiny C Puncturevine C Purslane, common C Pusley, Florida C Ragweed, ) common R giant R Sida. priLkly ( teaweed) C Smartweed ladysthumb C Pennsylvania C Spurge prostrate C spotted C Sunflower C Velvetleaf C waterhemp. tall C · . '

  • 8 - ('/'1'1 q

) GRAS \lEEDS Weeds Controlled Bar,yardgrass Crabgraso; large smooth Crowfootgrass Cupgrass, woolly Foxtail giant green yellow Goosegrass Itchgrass Johnsongrass seedling rhizome Millet, wild proso Panicum brown! op fall Texas Sandbur, fie Ie Shattercane Signalgrass, broadleaf Sorghwn almum Witchgrass Nutsedge yellow purple SEDGES

  • 9- Preplant Incorporated C C C C C C C C C R C R R c c c c c c c c R R (,/91 10

) SOIL APPLICATION INSTRUCTIONS PASSPORT may be soil applied and incol'porated up to 45 days (early preplant) prIor to soybean planting. DO NOT apply after planting soybeans. PASSPORT conteols weeds by uptake by weed roots and translocation to the growing points where it stops weed growth. Adequate soil moisture is required for optimum activity. The amount of rainfall or irrigation required following application depends on existing soil moisture. soi 1 texture and organic matter content. Suffic ient water to moisten the soil to a depth of 2 inches is normally adequate. If dry soil conditions persist following a PASSPORT application. a c·tltivation is recolDIDende~ to control escaped weeds. When adequate moisture is received after dry conditions. PASSPORT will provide residual control of susceptible germinating weeds; activity on established weeds will depend on the weed species and the location of its root system in the soil.

  • 10- 6/93 II

) ) PREPLANT INCORPORATED APPLICATIONS PASSPORT may be applied either prior to spring tUlage, or following land preparation and should be thoroughly incorporated to a depth of 2 to 3 inches. Whe,. applied to beds, maintain PASSPORT in the surface 1-2 Inches of the finished beds. Application may be made up to 4~ days prior to planting (early preplant). Incorporate prior to soybean planting and within 24 hours of application. Mechanical incorporation can be achieved by the following: (a) Disk harrow set to cut 3 to 4 inches deep and operated at 4 to 6 mph with the seconj pass at an angle to the first. (b) PTO-driven equipment (tillers, cultivators, hoes) set to cut 2-3 inches deep and operated one time at 4 mph or less. (c) Rolling cultivator set to cut 2 to 4 inches deep and operated two times at 6 to 8 mph. 'Jse only on coarse textured soils. (d) Field cultivator with 3 to 4 rows of sweeps (Do not use chisel points), spaced at intervals of 7 inches or less and staggered so that no soil is left unturned, set to cut 3 inches deep, and operated two times at more than 5 mph with the second pass made at an angle to the first_ (e) LELY-Roterra 4 set and operated according to the manufacturer's directions to thoroughly incorporate PASSPORT to a depth of 2 to 3 inches. (f) Do-All set and operated according to the manufacturer's directions to thoroughly incorporate PASSPORT to a depth of 2 to 3 inches. If soybeans are planted on beds, apply and incorporate a r _er bed formation using PTO-driven equipment or a rolling cultivator. For optimum weed control, PASSPORT should be maintained in the surface 1-2 inches of the finished beti. 4LELY-Roterra is a trademark of Lely. .. , .....

  • 11 - 6/93 . ~, .. ~ , I-Y

) ) ROTATIONAL CROPS The following rot~ttonal crops may be planted after applying PASSPORT at the recommended rate in soybeans:

  1. Anytime Lima beans Southerr. peas Soybeans Peanuts
  2. Four month~ after PASSPORT application: Wheat Edible beans and peas (other than lima beans and Southern peas)
  3. Nine and one-half months after PASSPORT application: Barley Field corn Field corn grown for seed* Rye Tobacco
  4. Eighteen months after PASSPORT application: Alfalfa Cotton Lettuce Oats Popcorn Safflower Sorghum Sweet corn
  5. Twenty six months after PASSPORT application.

All crops not listed .elsewhere in this RO·fATIONAL CROP GUIDt:LINE. Forty months after PASSPORT application. Sugarbeets *Several seed companies have tested a wide range of inbreds for sensitivity to PASSPORT soil residues and have reportd good crop safety. However, due to the proprietary nature of seed production, American Cyan,mid has not been given access to the inbred data. Growers are directed to contact the seed company for information and recommendations regarding the planting of corn grown for seed in fields treated with PASSPORT t1 e previous year. Since gowing conditions, environmental conditions and grower practices are beyond the control of American Gyanamid Company, all risks and consequences associated with planting seed corn inbreds into fields treated preViously with PASSPORT shall be assumed by the user. Use of PASSPORT herbicide in accordance with label directions is expected to result in normal growth of rotational crops in most situations; however, various environmental and agronomic factors make it impossible to elimiiatc·. all risks associated with the use of this product and, therefor~:' rotational crop injury is always possihle. ·1) 6/93 ... ' I " •••

  • , 13

) ) PRECAUTIONS If soybeans are furrow irrigated, till the soil prior to planting winter wheat or barley. The beds should be broken up and the soil mixed with tillage equipment set to cut 4-6 inches deep. Only rotational crops harvested at maturity may be used for feed or food. In the event of a crop loss due to weather, soybeans can be replanted. DO NOT work the soil deeper than 2 inches. There should be an interval of at least 85 days between an application of PASSPORT and soybean harvest. DO NOT graze or feed treated soybean forage, hay or straw to livestock. DO NOT apply products containing chlorimuron ethyl (Classic 5 , Canopy5, Gemini 5 , Lorox Plus 5 , PREVIEy5, etc.) or imazaquin (SCEPTER", SQUADRON", or TRI-SCEPT", SCEPTER· O. T.", SCEPTER" 70DG,) or prodl'cts containing imazethapyr (PURSUIT·, or PURSUIT" PLUS) the same year as PASSPORT or injury to follow crops may occur. 5Classic, Canopy, Preview, Gemini and Lorox Plus are trademarks of E.I. duPont de Nemours and Company' ·Registered Trademarks of American Cyanamid Company. For additional information regarding the use of PASSPORT herbicide, call telephone no. 800-942-0500. American Cyanamid Company Agricultural Products Division Crop Protection Chemicals Department Yayne, NJ 07470 01993 -13 6/'1 \ I\f

( --'. ACCEPTED willa COMMENTS I. EPA Leite' 0....1 MAR I 6 1995 BEST COpy AVAILABLE _. .. • •• • • ••• • •• 0 • • 0 • • I •••• _ · . •••• o • •••••• •• • • •••••• • I • , • • , .. ~ ~ . . . . . .