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OfflineLearyfanS
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Today in psychedelic history (04/17) * 1
    #14305320 - 04/17/11 09:45 AM (12 years, 10 months ago)

  • 1928:  Arthur Kleps is born




Quote:

Arthur Kleps (1928-1999) was a psychologist turned drug legalization advocate whose Neo-American Church defended use of marijuana and hallucinogens such as LSD and peyote for spiritual enlightenment and exploration.

Early Life

Kleps was born in New York April 17, 1928 to Lutheran minister Arthur R. Kleps and his wife Irene. He was married in 1959 to Sally Jane Pease, a fellow student at Syracuse University. Arthur earned a BS and Masters in Psychology from Syracuse and by 1959, was working as a psychologist at the Lynchburg Training School in Virginia.  The institution is notable for its role as a state mental hospital that was challenged for its role in the forced sterilization of patients in Buck v. Bell(1927) and Poe v. Lynchburg Training School and Hospital (1981).

Involvement in the psychedelic movement

In 1960, Kleps ordered 500mg of a hallucinogen, mescaline sulfate, in the mail and ingested it. He experienced a psychedelic trip that influenced him to make severe changes in his life and outlook. Kleps ceased employment with Lynchburg Training School, reportedly being fired in 1964 for writing a pro-marijuana paper.  He divorced his wife in December 1966 and joined Timthy Leary at Millbrook in 1967.  He founded the Neo-American Church and sought protection for the right to use marijuana and hallucinogens as religious sacraments. He testified before the US Senate's Judiciary Committee in May 1966, defending citizens' rights to use these drugs to explore consciousness.  Eventually a test case in 1968 signaled the judiciary's unwillingness to extend the same rights to drug use to the Neo-American Church as is permitted to Native American tribes who use peyote for similar purposes.  Kleps continued affiliation with the church. He later authored two books: The Boo Hoo Bible: The Neo-American Church Catechism and Handbook (1971) and Millbrook: A Narrative of the Early Years of American Psychedelianism (1975)

Later Life

Kleps spent time in Europe, notably Amsterdam, where he accused American Express and the DEA of intercepting his mail containing travelers checks.  He died July 17, 1999.  His last official residence was Sacramento, California.


(https://en.wikipedia.org)




Arthur Kleps
1928 - Jul 17, 1999

Summary

In 1960, Arthur Kleps was working as a school psychologist when he had a strong visionary experience on 500 mg of mescaline sulfate which he had ordered through the mail. After sending Timothy Leary a copy of his Neo-Psychopathic Character Test, Kleps was invited to visit Leary, Richard Alpert and Ralph Metzer who had moved to the Millbrook Estate.

In 1964 Kleps was fired from his position after writing a paper about marijuana. He then bought a piece of property in the Adirondacks and founded the Neo-American Church. He played the role of "Chief BooHoo, the Patriarch of the East" for the psychedelic church, a title intended to remind him not to take himself too seriously. The church used LSD and peyote as its sacrament and modelled itself vaguely after the Native American Church. After a long court case, the authorities eventually ruled that while native americans were allowed to take peyote within the context of religious ceremonies because it was traditional, the Neo-American church was not allowed that right because, in their eyes, the religious connection was being used as an excuse.

In 1967 Kleps moved to Millbrook and lived there for a year before it was dissolved due to police pressure in 1968. Timothy Leary described Kleps as a "mad monk". While living at Milbrook, Arthur Kleps was dosed one morning on a large dose of LSD and underwent a mystical experience. He eventually documented his adventures there in his book Millbrook. Unfortunately, Kleps also has a reputation for anti-semitic tendancies and at one point was kicked out of the Netherlands on this charge. Art Kleps died in 1999.


(http://www.erowid.org)









  • 1955:  Clyde Apperson is born




Quote:

Clyde Apperson (born 1955 in Sunnyvale, California) was arrested in 2000 for allegedly running the largest illicit LSD manufacturing operation in the history of the United States with partner William Leonard Pickard. In 2003 Apperson was sentenced to 30 years of imprisonment without the possibility of parole. While his partner Pickard had an extensive criminal history dating back to 1964, for numerous charges ranging from forgery and false identification charges to arrests for manufacturing controlled substances and carrying a concealed weapon, Apperson had no criminal record prior to his conviction.

Allegedly Pickard and Apperson previously manufactured LSD in Mountain View, California, in Oregon and in Santa Fe, New Mexico. The DEA claims the Santa Fe lab typically produced about 2.2 pounds of LSD (about 10 million doses with a street value of $40 million) every five weeks.

The DEA believes that Apperson and Pickard were responsible for manufacturing a majority of the LSD sold in the United States and cites an estimated 90 percent reduction in the drug's availability as evidence of this.


(wikipedia)


April 17, 1955 (from an embargoed DEA report of investigation)

-Tim Scully









  • 1966:  Millbrook is raided.  Timothy Leary is arrested again.




Quote:

But as the months passed, Millbrook started to lose its scientific bearings, the scene growing wilder and wilder as word got out to colleges dotting the East Coast. Residents of Dutchess County grew ever more suspicious. Students at the nearby all women’s Bennett College were shown close-ups of Leary at the start of each term, with administrators warning them that fraternizing with this man would mean instant expulsion. For Leary and his followers, the Buddhist insight that catches hold by about the fifth acid trip that nothing, even the magical paradise of Millbrook, could last forever, turned into creeping fears of an imminent bust.

Those fears were realized at around 2am on Sunday, April 17, 1966, when the newly-appointed assistant district attorney G. Gordon Liddy — yes, that G. Gordon Liddy — led a nighttime raid on the Millbrook estate, search warrant in hand, a climax to months of surveillance.

Liddy and 22 officers busted down the main door without knocking, even though, like all doors on the property, it was never locked. They found 29 adults and 12 children, most of them asleep. Searching the premises, officers found a small amount of cannabis, but no acid or other drugs. They confiscated Leary’s son’s high school chemistry set. Women were strip searched and asked whether they “had intercourse” on the premises.

Leary came down the stairs from his bedroom wearing nothing but a t-shirt, arguing with Liddy that his constitutional rights were being violated as officers failed repeatedly to convince him to put on pants. He was arrested along with three others. In a newspaper account the next day, Sheriff Quinlan described the mansion’s interior as grotesque. “There were weird paintings on the walls and some exotic statues,” he said. “There were candles all over the place and the house just reeked with incense.”

The dream was over. From that point onward, Millbrook was under constant surveillance. Police set up roadblocks around the premises, and anyone who wanted to enter the estate had to be strip searched. Many of the OG regulars departed the scene, replaced by strung out youngsters getting into harder drugs, like methamphetamine. Leary was a sporadic presence, spending more and more time in California.


(https://timeline.com)














Edited by Learyfan (04/16/22 07:44 AM)

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OfflineBest
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 3
    #16100773 - 04/17/12 05:18 AM (11 years, 10 months ago)

Hey figured I'd give this an early morning bump before I leave for work!



4-17-1970 - Plattsburgh Press Republican
State Police Describe 'Popular' Drugs


The "most popular" drugs in the north country are "methadrine, LSD, and STP."

This was the concensus Wednesday evening of Lt. George Mills of Malone Troop B headquarters of State Police and Plattsburgh Bureau of Criminal Investigations agent Mark Cross.

Lt. Mills provided the country legislature with a rundown on the narcotics problem and the drugs themselves.

Mills said the one group of narcotics which is not heavily used in the Clinton and Essex Counties area is that group called "opiates". These are narcotics derived from opium and the most popular is heroin.

Heroin addicts are not usually founs in small areas because according to Mills, they need $100 to $150 a day to support their habit and can't get that kind of money in rural area and can't hide in such areas.

He called heroin addiction the "most hideous" think he knows of, noting that although there are usually no heroin addicts in this area, people from this area do go to thelarger cities and become heroin addicts.

"I never met a single heroin addict," Mills said, "who didn't start out with marijuana."

The second general area of drugs is that called the "hallucinogenic" drugs, including LSD.

"This LSD is the most popular in that category," he said, "and the difference between hallucinogenic drugs and opiates is that the hallucinogenic drugs are not "physically addictive" from the start. He added, however, that they are addictive but the physical dependency is not present.

"But I know of many cases of someone taking one trip on LSD which has led to insanity and countless suicides," he said. "Some of the suicides are not really suicides, but actually accidents," he added.

"One who has taken LSD may very well feel he can fly," he said. "He might believe it so much he'd dive right out of a 20-story window thinking he's going to fly around the city."

One of the problems, he said, is that the hallucinations can return later without the use of the drug.

And he said regulation of the drug is not likely because the "trip you get depends upon the chemistry of your body, not the drug."

"LSD means a trip to the asylum for most people," he added.

Another general drugs area grouping is the "barbituites and amphetamines" or "goofballs and bennies."

"These include the pep pills and sleeping pills - many of which, according to Lt. Mills are innocent prescription drugs taken by many people and serving a legitimate purpose "under controlled circumstances."

He said uncontrolled they provide problems. "You;ve all read about the Hollywood stars who have returned from a cocktail party, taken a couple sleeping pills to go to sleep and wake up dead."

"They're too available, too easy and available in too large a dose," he said. Some youngsters, he said, take what they call a "roller coaster ride" by taking a pill every half hour.

And then there's the drug which everybody is interested in - marijuana or "pot."

"This is the one that many like to tell you is nothing at all," he said. He noted that marijuana is erroneously listed in the narcotic laws as a "narcotic drug" but should be listed with the hallucinogenics.

He said "alcohol we know is a dangerous drug," and therefore people try to equate marijuana with alcohol. He says it might be debatable is we were replacing alcohol with marijuana - the dangerous drug with another, but we aren't. "We're talking about adding another one and legalizing it," he said.

He said alcohol is a depressant, but marijuana is not. Drink too much alcohol, he said, and you'll slow up and go to sleep. Take too much marijuana, he said, and you go into "severe hallucinations."

Lt. Mills told of a 17 year old boy who smoked "pot" for the first time to try it, but smoked it too heavily. He said he thought his body was melting and thought he was becoming deformed and was restrained by friends.

"Luckily, it was enough to scare the fellow off forever, but many more don't," he said.

He said marijuana is "extremely dangerous - at least as dangerous as alcohol, maybe more."

He said the problem with marijuana leading to other drugs is that it makes the idea of taking a trip "psychologically attractive."

"It's a kid's thing," he said, "kids will try it."

"It's not as dangerous as many other drugs," he said, "but in some ways it's more because people don't respect it."







8-17-1985 Plattsburgh Press Republican
Federal Agents Crack Big LSD Ring
(Note - the date is actually August 17th 1985, I made a mistake here and thought this was from April)

San Francisco (UPI) - The alleged kingpin and three underlings accused of producing up to 20 percent of the nation's high-grade LSD were swept up in raids that netted 1.6 million doses of the drug, law enforcement officials reported Friday.

"The individuals arrested are clearly responsible for the manufacture and distribution of much of the LSD in the United States," Drug Enforcement Administration official Joseph Kruger said.

Along with the LSD, federal drug agents and the San Francisco police recovered 1 1/2 pounds of cocaine, nine pounds of marijuana and approximately $50,00 in US and foreign currency.

All the suspects were to be arraigned before a US magistrate.
Bernard N Hassall, 43, the purported ringleader and a British subject living in Sebastopol, Calif., was accused of running a sophisticated LSD distribution system that used computers to record sales and the chemical processes to put out what drug agents called and "extremely high quality of LSD."


/\ There are numerous articles about this if you search for "Bernard Hassall LSD" in Google.

Edited by Best (04/17/12 05:06 PM)

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OfflineLearyfanS
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Best] * 1
    #16102303 - 04/17/12 03:02 PM (11 years, 10 months ago)

Very interesting Best.  Especially the LSD drug ring story.  I would love to know more about these people and whatever happened to them.  I think you may have the date wrong though.  I went looking for Bernard Hassall, like you suggested and saw an AP story about it from both August 16, 1985 and August 17, 1985.  But still, thanks. 

Anyway, Happy Birthday Clyde Apperson and Art Kleps!

:cheers:

















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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #16102810 - 04/17/12 05:05 PM (11 years, 10 months ago)

lol I just double checked and I totally put the wrong date on that, whoops! I'll leave it posted but will edit the date for clarity.

I like this part in the first article, on top of his other ridiculousness - how do you 'wake up' dead?: "You've all read about the Hollywood stars who have returned from a cocktail party, taken a couple sleeping pills to go to sleep and wake up dead."

Also the author needs to find a simile for 'said' because they used that word like 100 times.

Damn shame what happened Pickard and Apperson. I remember after hearing about the bust wondering if the first time I got to try LSD was from them because it disappeared for a couple years after that.

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OfflineLearyfanS
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Best] * 1
    #16102824 - 04/17/12 05:08 PM (11 years, 10 months ago)

Yeah, those articles are ridiculous and funny.  But yeah, I also tried LSD around the time Pickard and Apperson got busted also.  I also wonder if they prepared my first trips.  I like to think so. 

:heart:















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OfflineLearyfanS
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #18122267 - 04/17/13 05:42 AM (10 years, 10 months ago)

Annual bump.














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OfflineLearyfanS
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 2
    #19858713 - 04/17/14 05:48 AM (9 years, 10 months ago)

Here's a little piece about Arthur Kleps at Millbrook written by a blogger.





Quote:

HALLELUJAH.......We Have Found Religion!

Meanwhile, hundreds of letters asking about LSD poured into Millbrook from those who couldn't make it in person.  A ten-point scale was devised for replies, with "one" calling for a dull "Dear Sir" form letter and "ten" meaning a totally way-out response.  The replies to Arthur Kleps, a virtual unknown who would soon make his presence felt at Millbrook, were consistently in the eight and nine point range.
    In 1960, while still a graduate student in psychology, Kleps sent away to the Delta Chemical Company for five hundred milligrams of mescaline sulfate.  Alter swallowing the bitter powder, he spun through an unforgettable ten-hour journey: "All night I alternated between eyes-open terror and eyes-closed astonishment.  With eyelids shut I saw a succession of elaborate scenes which lasted a few seconds each before being replaced by the next in line.  Extraterrestrial civilizations.  Jungles.  Organic computer interiors.  Animated cartoons.  Abstract light shows..."  For the next four years, Kleps kept this experience more or less to himself, "thinking about small things like sex, money, and politics."  However, when he discovered that there was a group of intellectuals taking psychedelics on the grounds of a country estate, writing papers about trip realities, and having a great time, Kleps decided he was "just being chicken."  School psychology went out the window; it was high time to start catching up with the psychedelic pacesetters, and the only way to do that was to join them.

Kleps did not fit into the scene so readily.  The first time he took acid at Millbrook, he wound up brandishing a gun, and Hollingshead promptly thew him out of the house.  Despite this initial faux pas, Kleps was later admitted as a resident of the gatehouse.  He was more of an epistemological hard-liner than the others, who in his opinion wanted nothing better than to have unusual experiences and proclaim them religiously significant.  Kleps was straining to develop a metaphysical system that would encompass the far-reaching implications of psychedelics, brooding over such basic questions as "What is Mind?"  and "What is the external world?"  His solipsistic excursions were frowned upon as nit-picking, strictly a downer.  "You're on a bad trip, Art," said Leary, who scolded the newcomer for drinking too much and not grooving with a more cosmic perspective.
    In those days a high dose of LSD was viewed as a solution for almost anything, and someone had the bright idea that it might solve the "Kleps problem."  One of his comrades-Kleps swore it was Hollingshead-placed a few thousand mikes of pure Sandoz in a snifter of brandy beside his bedstand.  Before he even rubbed the sleep out of his eyes, Kleps downed the brandy.  A few minutes later he realized he was having trouble brushing his teeth.  "I was knocked to the floor as all normal sensation and motor control left my body.  The sun, roaring like an avalanche, was headed straight for me, expanding like a bomb and filling my consciousness in less time than it takes to describe it.  It swirled clockwise, and made two and one half turns before I lost all normal consciousness and passed out, right there on the floor."  As he groveled on all fours he got a shot of Thorazine in the rear, but it failed to bring him down.  He spent the last hours of the trip sitting in a bed in the lotus position.  As Kleps told it, a big book appeared, suspended in space about three feet in front of him, the pages turning automatically, every letter illuminated in gold against sky-blue pages.  It was only years later, when he read a description of the two and one half turns that characterize the classic kundalini experience, that he came to an understanding of what he went through the day he'd been "bombed," as the parlance had it.  None of the Millbrook priests would acknowledge that a release of kundalini energy was what happened to Kleps; maybe they thought he wasn't spiritually mature or pure enough to have had "the big one."

    Kleps, however, thought himself sufficiently advanced on the spiritual path to found his own psychedelic religion, the Neo-American Boohoo Church.  Formed in 1966, the Boohoos claimed that their use of LSD was sacramental, similar to the peyote rituals practiced by Indians of the Native American Church, and should therefore be protected under law.  Not surprisingly, the Boohoos lost their case in court when the judge ruled that an organization with "Row, Row, Row Your Boat" as it's theme song was not serious enough to qualify as a church.  "Apparently," Kleps concluded, "those in control of the instrumentalities of coercive power in the United States had no difficulty in recognizing a psychedelic religion as a psychedelic religion when that religion was safely encapsulated in a racial minority group living outside the mainstream of American Life."

Kleps, whom Leary described as the "mad monk" and an "ecclesiastical guerilla," was particularly sensitive to the dangers of elevating institutional forms to the level of eternal verities, and so included elements of foolishness and buffoonery in his church.  The church catechism is contained in his Boohoo Bible, full of cartoons, true-or-false tests, and a variety of hilarious liturgical observations on such topics as "How to Guide a Session for Maximum Mind Loss" and "The Bombardment and Annihilation of the Planet Saturn."  Small monthly dues entitled members to a psychedelic coloring book as well as copies of the religious bulletin Divine Toad Sweat, emblazoned with the church motto, "Victory over Horse-shit."  Leary was a bit miffed: "Art, this is not a psychedelic love message.  It's a whiskey trip."  But the Chief Boohoo was adamant: "It's my trip, take it or leave it."

A side note...Timothy Leary was trying to "Program" trips going hand in hand with
"The Tibetan Book of the Dead".  Which was actually, really fucking people up.....
Soooo, with that background, let's get back to Arthur Kleps, and how he felt about this.

    Kleps took issue with Leary's conception of a good trip.  He insisted that people who never had mystical experiences on acid could learn just as much as those who did.  He thought Leary placed too much emphasis on pleasurable visions.  "Nine times out of ten, talk about bad trips resolves itself into a naïve identification of pleasurable visionary scenes and sensory appreciation of the present (during the trip) with 'goodness.'  When such people find themselves in a few Hell-Worlds here and there, they think that something is seriously amiss."  For Kleps, LSD was never supposed to be easier than traditional methods of self-realization; it was only "faster and sneakier."  According to the Chief Boohoo, you could be devoured by demons during a psychedelic experience and it still might be a good trip if you came out of it feeling that it was worthwhile.  Kleps maintained that striving for a preconceived visionary end in the acid high only complicated things and let to bummers.

"It is as if [Leary] deliberately and with malice aforethought polluted the stream at it's source and gave half the kids in psychedelic society a bad set to start out with.  Almost every acidhead I taled to for years afterwards told me he had, as a novice, used The Tibetan Book of the Dead as a "guide"-
and every one of them reported unnecessary anxiety, colossal bummers, disillusionment, and eventual frustration & exasperation, for which, in most cases, they blamed themselves, not Tim or the book.
They were not "pure" enough, or perhaps the "Lord of Death" did not deign to transform them because they were not worthy of His attentions, etc., etc."
Arthur Kleps

Spring of 1966
    The Senate Subcommittee on Juvenile Delinquency convenes yet another round of hearings in Washington, DC, to deal with the growing "LSD problem......"

Leary has been on the stand, babbling like the laughing stock / court jester that he doesn't even know he is....Albert Hoffman, the Godfather of LSD, was not to keen on Leary, to put it simply....

"My most serious remonstrance to Leary, however, concerned the propagation of LSD use among juveniles...."
"....I further objected to the great publicity that Leary sought for his LSD and psilocybin investigations...."
"Leary also showed carelessness regarding charges and dangers that concerned his own person, as his further path in life emphatically showed."
All 3 quotes from Albert Hoffman, in his book,
"LSD: My Problem Child"

    Arthur Kleps grew peeved as he watched the politicians react with scorn and derision to Leary's testimony.  When it was his turn to speak, he decided to get tough with his interlocutors.  "Would you mind telling me if you are really called Chief Boohoo?"  asked one southern senator.  "I'm afraid so," Kleps replied.  Whereupon he launched into one of the most outrageous diatribes ever delivered on Capitol Hill.
    "It is difficult for us to imagine what it is like to have been born in 1948," Kleps ranted, "but it is very much like being born into an insane asylum."  The Chief Boohoo was particularly irked by FDA commissioner Goddard's contention that LSD-induced mind expansion was "pure bunk" since it could not be measured by objective tests.  "If I were to give you an IQ test and during the administration one of the walls of the room opened up giving you a vision of the blazing glories of the central galactic suns, and at the same time your childhood began to unreel before your inner eye like a three-dimensional color movie, you would not do well on the intelligence test."
    Kleps spoke with righteous vengeance.  "We are not drug addicts, we are not criminals, we are free men, and we will react to persecution the way free men have always reacted."  If Leary was imprisoned, Kleps threatened, then all hell would break loose.  There'd be a religious civil war.  "I'd rather see the prison system become inoperable, and it would be if large amounts of LSD were delivered into the prison and distributed among the inmates...We would have to regard these places as concentration camps where people are being imprisoned because of their religion....I would resort to violence....This is the way the country started..."
ALL of this is from the book
"Acid Dreams, The Complete Social History of LSD: CIA, 60's, And Beyond"
by, Martin A. Lee & Bruce Shlain


(http://theelectricsunshine.blogspot.com)

















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OfflineLearyfanS
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #21558465 - 04/17/15 05:48 AM (8 years, 10 months ago)

Happy 60th Birthday Clyde Apperson!

:cheers:

















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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #23127249 - 04/17/16 12:26 PM (7 years, 10 months ago)

50th anniversary of G. Gordon Liddy's raid on Millbrook today. 












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Mp3 of the month:  The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 - I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)


Edited by Learyfan (08/12/17 04:55 PM)

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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 2
    #24250937 - 04/17/17 06:23 AM (6 years, 10 months ago)

Annual bump.














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Mp3 of the month:  The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 - I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)


Edited by Learyfan (04/17/20 08:19 AM)

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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #25144873 - 04/17/18 05:57 AM (5 years, 10 months ago)

Today would have been Arthur Kleps' 90th birthday! 

:cheers:










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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan]
    #25939365 - 04/17/19 05:44 AM (4 years, 10 months ago)

Michael Bowen was living at Millbrook when the April 17, 1966 raid too place.  Here's his account of what happened.  The next two videos are clips from the Jonas Mekas short film "Report From MillBrook".  They had the full video online recently, but it was taken down.















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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan]
    #26607480 - 04/17/20 08:21 AM (3 years, 10 months ago)

Happy 65th Birthday Clyde Apperson!  I hope you won't be spending too many more birthdays behind bars. 

:cheers:










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Mp3 of the month:  The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 - I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)


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OfflineLearyfanS
It's the psychedelic movement!
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Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,141
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan]
    #27738501 - 04/17/22 09:32 AM (1 year, 10 months ago)

I guess Clyde is out now. Thank god. But does anyone know when he got out? It's so unclear. Even his BOP still says he gets out 2028.









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Mp3 of the month:  The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 - I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)


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OfflineTyperwritermonky
shboop a doop a doop


Registered: 01/19/12
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Learyfan] * 1
    #27739641 - 04/18/22 02:19 AM (1 year, 10 months ago)

So as I take it, Clyde A. and William Pickard were the chemists making the LSD together right?

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OfflineLearyfanS
It's the psychedelic movement!
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Registered: 04/20/01
Posts: 34,141
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Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Typerwritermonky]
    #28281514 - 04/17/23 03:37 AM (10 months, 10 days ago)

Yes sir!







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Mp3 of the month:  The Fe-Fi-Four Plus 2 - I Wanna Come Back (From the World of LSD)


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Offlinetowndaze
Diviner
I'm a teapot


Registered: 04/20/19
Posts: 361
Last seen: 1 month, 10 days
Re: Today in psychedelic history (04/17) [Re: Typerwritermonky]
    #28282159 - 04/17/23 02:24 PM (10 months, 9 days ago)

And the person running the Neurosoup channel was likely the one who snitched on them!


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