Pubdate: Thu, 07 Feb 2008
Source: Yale Daily News (CT Edu)
Copyright: 2008 Yale Daily News
Contact:  http://www.yaledailynews.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/1614
Author:  Divya Subrahmanyam
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens)

LSD AND 'SHROOMS AT YALE? IN THE '60S, SURE

"I would like to see some college set up a psychedelic center and 
after a great deal of careful preparation, make an expertly guided 
session available to the students willing to prepare for it," said 
former assistant professor of psychology Michael Kahn, advocating the 
academically-sanctioned use of LSD.

These words were printed in an Oct. 1966 edition of the News, right 
in the middle of an era popularly considered synonymous with flower 
power, free love and psychedelia.

Was Kahn's comment reflective of the mood of the times?

Alumni and sources from the News' archives reveal that in the late 
1960s and '70s, drugs were associated with progressivism and 
intellectualism, and as a result became more widely discussed and 
used, surpassing alcohol as the substance of choice for many students.

Christopher Buckley '75, the author of "Thank You for Smoking" and a 
former editor for the News, said students also took mushrooms and 
nitrous oxide, commonly known as laughing gas.

He said a group of his friends had a connection to the night watchman 
at New Haven Compressed Air, who often "looked the other way" as the 
students carried out a tank of nitrous oxide, which they would use at 
"laughing gas parties." On one occasion, a student dropped the tank on his toe.

"We all sat around doing laughing gas while his toe swelled to about 
12 times its normal size," Buckley said. "But we had a supply of 
anesthetic, so we elected to self-medicate him."

Although Buckley's experience was not necessarily the norm of the 
era" a 1969 poll by the News said only 9 percent of students had 
tried hallucinogenic drugs" milder drugs were a pervasive part of Yale culture.

Alumni said the most commonly used drugs of the era were marijuana 
and LSD. According to a poll conducted by the News in 1969, 35 
percent of Yalies had tried marijuana, compared to only 26 percent of 
students who said they had in News poll of 850 students conducted 
between Friday and Sunday.

In Dec. 1968, the News published an editorial by F. Jay Dougherty '71 
arguing for the legalization of marijuana. The author, now a law 
professor and entertainment lawyer in Los Angeles, said he still 
stands by the argument he made as a student.

During his time at Yale, he said drugs seemed to be used for reasons 
other than simply recreation, as he thinks they are most commonly 
used now, citing the "stupid, stoner image" of modern users.

"There was a lot of intellectual curiosity and an almost 
anthropological exploration," he said, referring to students' 
experimentation when he was at Yale.  "People who got high were a 
subgroup of people who were progressive politically."

Like Dougherty, history professor Geoffrey Kabaservice '88, who 
studies Yale, said marijuana use at Yale during the '60s and '70s was 
often a political act of defiance for students who thought the 
government's classification of substances as illegal was arbitrary 
and politically-based.

"[Marijuana] was a way to feel solidarity with that part of your 
generation," he said.

Kabaservice said some sources have suggested that by the late '60s 
and early '70s, marijuana had even replaced alcohol as the drug of 
choice. He said that by the late 1970s, marijuana use had become so 
prevalent that a professor once noticed a group of inebriated 
undergraduates in one of the dining halls, and was surprised that 
they were drunk and not high.

Many students continued to drink alcohol, Dougherty said, but it was 
looked upon as primitive and conservative.

Throughout the era, topics related to drugs and drug use were 
discussed openly. LSD, for example, showed up often in old News 
articles" some of which addressed it directly, while others mentioned 
it in passing.

One 1968 movie review printed in the News, on the psychedelic film 
"The Trip," praised the movie for its similarity to an acid trip, 
encouraging use of the drug in the piece.

"The sensitivity and expertise with which [the director] creates the 
effects of LSD are evidence of his first-hand experience. The 
spectacular visual effects are really psychedelic," said the October 
1968 article. "If you're stoned when you see "The Trip," your 
pleasure will increase tenfold."

But LSD and marijuana were not the only drugs on campus. One piece, 
by Hugh Spitzer '70, on the rising prices of drugs, included a 
laundry list of substances that the NHPD Gambling and Narcotics Squad 
claimed were used on campus. Among these drugs were white acid, 
mescaline, methedrine and various combinations with names like San 
Francisco Speedball, Pink Wedges and Purple Owsley.

Dougherty added that some students used speed for studying" an 
observation that mirrors current poll responses, though the results 
show that students have now turned instead to prescription drugs instead.

Spitzer's story concluded with the following sentence: "Illegal or 
not, drugs will most likely remain a part of the scene for some time to come." 
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MAP posted-by: Richard Lake