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- From: "J. J. Larrea" <jjl@Panix.Com>
- Message-Id: <199304162012.AA11826@sun.Panix.Com>
- Subject: Article on LSD: Increased use and historical timeline
- To: ne-raves@gnu.ai.mit.edu (raves)
- Date: Fri, 16 Apr 1993 16:12:32 -0400 (EDT)
-
- This might be interesting to some... the timeline at the end credits
- renewed hallucinogenic usage to the rave scene, circa 1988.
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- Fifty Years Later, LSD Gains New Popularity in High Schools
- San Francisco, Calif. (AP) -- On the 50th anniversary of the first use of
- LSD, a new study says LSD use among high school seniors is at its highest
- level in seven years, and more teenagers are sniffing glue and other volatile
- substances.
- The most widely used drugs among eighth-graders are inhalants -- products
- such as glue and air fresheners, said Lloyd Johnston, chief researcher for
- the study by the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Research.
- In addition, the number of eighth-graders using drugs of all types is
- rising, the study found.
- "The nation's attention to the subject has slacked off," Johnston told the
- Associated Press. "Now we may be harvesting the bitter fruit for that change
- in emphasis."
- Among seniors, 5.6 percent admitted using LSD in the past year, up from
- 5.2 percent in 1991. Use of LSD, widely associated with the '60s, had dropped
- among seniors from 7.2 percent in 1975 -- the first year for the survey -- to
- 4.4 percent in 1985.
- "I think the major dynamic problem has been through sort of a general
- forgetting process," Johnston said. "I'm not sure how many people expected
- LSD use to make a resurgence."
- As for inhalants, the study found 9.5 percent of eighth-graders used them
- in the past year, up from 9 percent in 1991.
- Politicians, educators and the news media generally do not mention
- inhalants when they talk about drugs, Johnston said. "I think they really
- don't have an under standing of the dangers of inhalants yet," he said.
- About 17,000 seniors in 135 public and private schools nationwide filled
- out questionnaires in their classrooms for the study, as did about 18,000
- eighth-graders in 160 schools and about 15,000 10th-graders in 125 schools.
- While results for 10th-graders were basically unchanged from last year,
- the study found some significant increases in the number of eighth-graders
- admitting to using certain drugs. The study also found a decrease in the
- number of eighth-graders who disapproved of drug use.
- Among eighth-graders, the share of those who admitted using marijuana was
- 7.2 percent, up from 6.2 percent; LSD, 2.1 percent, up from 1.7 percent;
- cocaine, 1.5 percent, up from 1.1 percent; crack, 0.9 percent, up from 0.7
- percent; and other hallucinogens, 1.1 percent, up from 0.7 percent.
- "That causes a worry that the youngest cohorts maybe aren't learning as
- much about drugs as their predecessors who grew up in a drug-infested world,"
- Johnston said.
-
- ORIGINS OF LSD
- When chemist Albert Hofmann accidently brushed against one of his own
- creations 50 years ago Friday, he started a psychedelic journey that has
- lasted to this day. Hofmann had taken the world's first LSD trip.
- Hofmann clearly remembers that day as "an uninterrupted stream of
- fantastic images of extraordinary plasticity ... accompanied by an intense,
- kaleidoscopelike play of colors."
- Hofmann created LSD-25 -- lysergic acid diethylamide -- in his Swiss
- laboratory in 1938 while seeking a blood stimulant. His maiden trip came by
- accident when a tiny amount seeped into his skin.
- Since then, LSD's reputation has been as turbulent as some acid trips.
- Although popular in the underground, the drug earned a bad reputation amid
- reports of fatalities associated with hallucinations and reports of
- "flashbacks" -- a recurrence of hallucinations when no new dose of the drug
- had been taken.
- The government banned the drug and scientists, for the most part, dropped
- their research.
- The drug was popularized by one-time Harvard lecturer Timothy Leary, known
- as the "high priest of LSD," whose "turn on, tune in, drop out" advice to
- students in the 1960s glamorized the hallucinogen.
- Rick Doblin recalls his own first acid trip. As it took effect, he heard an
- air raid siren and was convinced his life was over.
- He rushed outside to "live it up" and suddenly realized he had never
- noticed the world's beautiful colors.
- "I was in this exhilarated, exalted state," he recalled recently for the
- Associated Press. "I felt like all of my senses were opening up in a way I
- wasn't aware of."
- Doblin, now 39 and founder of the Multidisciplinary Association for
- Psychedelic Studies Inc., or MAPS, is among researchers who advocate medical
- use of hallucinogens. They will gather this weekend to mark the anniversary.
- The three-day Psychedelic Summit will feature talks by Leary; Laura
- Huxley, wife of the late author and LSD experimenter Aldous Huxley; and Paul
- Krassner, editor of The Realist. It will focus on the use of mind-altering
- drugs in mental health therapy and substance abuse treatment.
- And where better to hold the summit than San Francisco, where acid trips
- fueled the psychedelic '60s and made the city's hippie-crowded Haight-Ashbury
- district an international symbol of the times.
- The government refused to approve psychedelic drugs research until
- recently, when the Food and Drug Administration authorized a study on the
- effects of using LSD for substance abuse treatment.
-
- LSD TIMELINE
- A chronology of the history of lysergic acid diathylamide, LSD:
- * 1938: Chemist Albert Hofmann synthesizes LSD-25 at Sandoz Pharmaceutical
- Laboratories in Basel, Switzerland, in search of creating a blood stimulant.
- * April 16, 1943: Hofmann accidentally absorbs a minute amount of LSD-25
- through the skin on his finger. He reported seeing "an uninterrupted stream
- of fantastic images of extraordinary plasticity ... accompanied by an
- intense, kaleidoscopelike play of colors." The experience lasted about three
- hours.
- * April 19, 1943: Hofmann deliberately ingests 250 micrograms of LSD-25. He
- begins writing laboratory notes, but the drug's effects become too great. He
- rides his bicycle home. Suffering great anxiety, he calls a doctor. The next
- morning, Hofmann reports his physical and mental health are excellent.
- * 1947: The first report on mental effects of LSD published by Werner
- Stoll.
- * 1952: Charles Savage publishes the first study on the use of LSD to treat
- depression.
- * 1953: First LSD clinic opens in England under Ronald Sandison.
- Separately, unwitting subjects in United States were given LSD in the CIA
- funded Project MK-Ultra to test the effects of the drug.
- * 1955: First conference focusing on LSD and mescaline takes place in
- Atlantic City and Princeton, N.J.
- * 1960: Harvard University's Timothy Leary establishes the Psychedelic
- Research Project.
- * 1963: The first year LSD believed to appear on the streets. Doses were
- dropped on a sugar cube. Articles about LSD first appear in mainstream media
- (Life, Look, Saturday Evening Post). Leary is fired from Harvard.
- * 1966: The government bans LSD.
- * 1967: First Human Be-In held in San Francisco. Height of the Summer of
- Love in San Francisco, Los Angeles, New York City and London.
- * 1976: Blotter acid (LSD placed on a piece of paper) emerges as the
- primary kind of underground LSD.
- * 1975: End of the last formal LSD research program.
- * 1979: Hofmann publishes "LSD: My Problem Child."
- * 1988: Psychedelic movement re-emerges along with popularity of raves,
- all-night dance parties featuring synthesized music and use of hallucenogenic
- drugs.
-