Pubdate: Thu, 09 Mar 2006
Source: Harvard Independent (MA Edu)
Page: Cover Article
Copyright: 2006 The Harvard Independent, Inc.
Contact:  http://www.harvardindependent.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/3984
Authors: Shane Wilson and Jon Liu
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/topics/LSD (LSD)
Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/hallucinogens.htm (Hallucinogens)

HARVARD IN THE SKY WITH DIAMONDS

Of veritas and LSD.

When news broke a fortnight ago that two undergraduates had been 
arrested in connection with a nude, acid-fueled spectacle in the 
corridors of Quincy House's C-entry, one could have been forgiven for 
checking the calendar. Yes, it was 2006, not 1966 -- yet once again, 
the banks of the Charles were playing host to psychedelic excess.

Thirty-eight hits' worth of excess, to be precise -- the number that 
the Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) allegedly found in 
the room of Soren J. Siebach '08, as first reported in a February 25 
article on the Crimson's website. The other arrestee, whom HUPD has 
not yet named, was hospitalized for drug treatment after assaulting 
two officers; naked and "acting in an aggressive and threatening 
manner," in the words of police logs, he initially eluded capture 
because his skin was too sweaty to seize.

Siebach, a Utah native, came to college with a perfect ACT score and 
an avowed interest in "disco skating," according to his high-school 
newspaper. Now he faces a mandatory minimum sentence of two years' 
imprisonment, thanks to Massachusetts school-zone provisions. (Quincy 
House is across the street from the Radcliffe Child Care Center, a 
"private accredited preschool" under the law.)

Siebach's cohort will face arraignment next week on one count of 
marijuana possession and two counts of assault and battery against a 
police officer, said HUPD spokesperson Steven G. Catalano. The former 
charge has a maximum sentence of six months; the latter, two and a half years.

The incident came as a surprise, wrote Quincy C resident Kevin J. 
Feeney '08 in an e-mail. "A lot of people are confused about what did 
happen that night, and I suppose worried about what will happen." 
Nonetheless, Feeney said, "the talk has stayed relatively quiet. 
Nothing on the open list, no official statement." He described the 
Quincy community overall as "sympathetic toward everyone involved. We 
haven't gone Salem, yet."

Catalano, the HUPD spokesperson, characterized the incident as 
unusual -- especially in light of the hallucinogen involved. "We 
weren't necessarily surprised," he said, "but it was something new. 
Most of our drug arrests involve marijuana." He could not recall 
another specific LSD-related arrest from his six years with the Department.

In all likelihood, Catalano said, the event does not signal a 
resurgence of LSD use at Harvard -- though one wonders who was on the 
receiving end of Siebach's alleged "intent to distribute" the 38 
hits. Regardless, the Quincy House sideshow represents just the 
latest chapter in Harvard's long and storied history with D-lysergic 
acid diethylamide -- a history that has seen the hallucinogen 
flirting with both sides of the countercultural divide.

American Pioneers

Today, the Massachusetts Mental Health Center, described on its 
website as "a unique collaboration between the Massachusetts 
Department of Health and Harvard Medical School," serves as a premier 
teaching hospital for psychologists, psychiatrists, and other 
mental-health professionals. In a less genteel time, however, the 
Harvard-affiliated Center was called the Boston Psychopathic Hospital 
- -- and in 1949, it witnessed the American arrival of a European immigrant: LSD.

Six years earlier, the Swiss scientist Albert Hoffman had discovered 
first-hand the hallucinogenic powers of the compound, which he had 
originally synthesized in 1938. But according to John D. Marks' 1979 
book The Search for the "Manchurian Candidate" (Time Books), 
Hoffman's substance received little attention in the States until a 
Viennese psychiatry professor named Otto Kauders extolled its virtues 
at a conference held at Boston Psychopathic. Kauders, described in an 
Associated Press obituary as "internationally known," suggested that 
the schizophrenia-like state that LSD seemed to induce might come in 
handy for researchers; if they could find an antidote to the drug, 
they might also find the cure for a range of mental illnesses. 
Fascinated by Kauders' ideas, the neuropsychiatrist Max Rinkel, a 
German emigre working for Boston Psychopathic's Department of 
Research, requested a sample of LSD from a Swiss pharmaceutical company.

Robert W. Hyde, the hospital's assistant superintendent, volunteered 
to serve as the guinea pig. Rinkel later described Hyde's first foray 
into psychedelia at a neuropharmacology conference in Princeton. 
After downing 100 micrograms of LSD, Rinkel said, Hyde "became quite 
paranoid, saying that we had not given him anything. He also berated 
us and said that the company had cheated us...That was not Dr. Hyde's 
normal behavior; he is a very friendly, pleasant man." To be sure, 
Hyde's transformation blew no minds, and his drug-addled persona, 
however abrasive, paled in comparison to that of his literary 
namesake. Even so, his was the first documented "trip" in American 
history -- organized and funded, at least in part, by the Harvard 
Medical School.

In another early test case described by Rinkel, he and a 
Massachusetts General Hospital psychiatrist "were very fortunate in 
having an outstanding contemporary American painter volunteer for an 
experiment with LSD." The volunteer was Hyman Bloom, a then prominent 
Boston artist who had studied under Denman W. Ross, a Harvard 
professor emeritus. Not only were Bloom's LSD-loosened words recorded 
for science; he also translated his experience into a series of 
pencil drawings. The scribbles charted Bloom's hallucinatory descent. 
Two hours into the experiment, Rinkel said, Bloom wrote "Hindu 
religion" in the upper corner of a piece of paper; "in the lower part 
he drew monsters, commenting: 'This face comes out like a cat-like 
face.'" At times, he was reduced to "making dots and dashes"; at 
other times, he managed to sketch out a picture of "a butchered beef 
or ox" that he later sold to a private collector. Seeking the opinion 
of an expert critic, Rinkel turned to Wilhelm R. W. Koehler, the 
William Dorr Boardman Professor Emeritus of Fine Arts at Harvard. 
What Koehler said is unknown, but with or without his approbation the 
Fogg Art Museum eventually acquired over 60 of Bloom's works, thanks 
in part to donations from his old mentor, Professor Ross.

In 1966, Bloom spoke to the New York Times about his path-breaking 
trip, calling it "really a great experience." "On the other hand," he 
said, "it was more difficult to draw."

With Rinkel's help, the heavily Harvard-connected Bloom had become 
one of the first people ever to combine art with LSD; he would not be 
the last. Yet while Bloom and Rinkel led the way in creative and 
aesthetic uses of the drug, Rinkel's colleagues at Boston 
Psychopathic -- and in particular ur-tripper Robert W. Hyde -- were 
steering the hallucinogen in much more sinister directions.

Central Intelligence

It is not clear precisely how or when it happened, but perhaps as 
early as 1952 Boston Psychopathic had become ground zero for Project 
MKULTRA. Described in a 1977 New York Times article as "a secret, 
25-year, $25-million effort by the Central Intelligence Agency to 
learn how to control the human mind," the project sought to counter 
potential Soviet brainwashing by developing its own techniques for 
manipulating and programming behavior -- techniques that sometimes 
involved hallucinogenic drugs. "The most fascinating thing about 
[LSD]," an anonymous former MKULTRA official told author John Marks 
in 1979, "was that such minute quantities had such a terrific 
effect." But precisely what "effect" LSD had was still poorly 
understood. By funneling money to academics through a number of 
private foundations and front groups, the CIA aimed to find out 
exactly what the drug could do.

And Dr. Hyde aimed to help. Officially, only he and his immediate 
superior -- hospital superintendent, Harvard Medical School graduate, 
and Harvard Medical School psychiatry professor Harry C. Solomon -- 
knew where the money for the hospital's LSD program -- some $286,000 
spread across nine years -- really came from. Unofficially, other 
high-level researchers could not be so easily hoodwinked; one, Dr. J. 
Herbert DeShon, told Marks that his colleagues were aware of the 
intelligence agency's role but "agreed not to discuss it."

Supported by CIA largesse, Hyde and a handful of collaborators -- 
including a fellow Medical School professor and a future Bureau of 
Study Counsel director -- undertook basic LSD research, publishing a 
series of journal articles that meticulously investigated the effects 
of the drug on experimental subjects. In flat, academic prose, the 
articles' abstracts paint a lurid picture of what the project 
entailed. A 1952 study published in the American Journal of 
Psychiatry and co-authored by Hyde, Rinkel, DeShon, and Solomon 
outlined "the effect of [LSD]...upon normal male and female 
individuals, who responded to the administration of this drug with a 
psychotic-schizophrenic like reaction. Disturbances of thought and 
speech, affect and mood, perception, depersonalization, behavior, and 
intellect are reported." A 1957 study entitled "Experimentally 
Induced Depersonalization" claimed to catalogue "569 distortions" 
induced in 48 subjects dosed with LSD; "these are classified as 
changes of self, of others, of objects and physical environment, and 
of general thought processes...Persons with strong positive or 
negative feelings are especially exposed to depersonalization experiences."

Such responses, however intriguing or frightening, remained vague and 
difficult to measure. Hyde pressed on with more experiments, 
examining as many as 100 subjects at a time in ever sharper 
physiological and psychological detail. According to a 1994 Boston 
Globe investigation, these subjects included Harvard and Radcliffe 
students -- enticed by the $25 offered in exchange for participation 
- -- along with hospital staff members and mentally ill patients, many 
of whom did not or could not give informed consent by today's 
standards. In later years, students might well have leaped at the 
opportunity to get paid for taking the drug, but according to the 
Globe, Boston Psychopathic's subjects typically did not understand 
what they were getting themselves into when they "volunteered." They 
knew they would participate in a drug study; they did know that LSD 
was the drug in question. Even if they had, LSD was still obscure in 
the '50s and early '60s. Only medical professionals had a good idea 
of what the substance could do -- and at Boston Psychopathic, they 
kept their mouths shut for the sake of the project.

Despite the efforts of Hyde and his colleagues, however, the secret 
of "mind control" continued to elude MKULTRA. Ideally, Boston 
Psychopathic's public research was supposed to yield covert 
applications: "in effect," wrote Marks, "the scientists would write 
openly about how LSD affects a patient's pulse rate, but they would 
tell only the CIA how the drug could be used to ruin that patient's 
marriage or memory." But while LSD did sometimes render people 
extremely suggestible or otherwise vulnerable, its effects were so 
contingent, so unstable, that it made for an unreliable truth serum 
or brainwashing agent. By 1961, the Harvard-affiliated hospital's 
CIA-funded drug research came to a close. For at least one of its 
subjects, however, the story did not end there. The Globe uncovered a 
1981 letter written by a student -- alma mater unknown -- who took 
part in an LSD test in 1955. Devastated by the experience, he dropped 
out of school and meandered around the globe for more than two 
decades, lost and alone.

"A New Race of Mutants"?

Far better known than Harvard's complicity in clandestine 
intelligence research is its relationship with the late 
counterculture icon Timothy Leary. Leary, a lecturer in clinical 
psychology, joined forces with Richard Alpert, an assistant professor 
in the same field, to explore the mind-expanding powers of 
hallucinogenic drugs -- first psilocybin (the substance that makes 
"magic" mushrooms magic), then LSD.

Colleagues at the Center for Personality Research attacked Leary and 
Alpert for their unscientific methodology, which consisted chiefly of 
giving people drugs and seeing what happened. Herbert C. Kelman, then 
a lecturer on social psychology and now the Richard Clarke Cabot 
Professor Emeritus of Social Ethics, denounced Leary and Alpert as 
"nonchalant" and "anti-intellectual," according to a March 15, 1962, 
article in the Crimson (prior to the founding of the Independent). 
The rogue researchers placed an inappropriate "emphasis...on pure 
experience, not on verbalizing findings," Kelman reportedly said. "It 
is an attempt to reject most of what the psychologist tries to do."

The Harvard Corporation agreed, dismissing both Alpert and Leary in 
1963. By 1967, Alpert had traveled to India, taken up yoga, and 
renamed himself Ram Dass ("servant of God"). By 1970, Leary had been 
convicted of marijuana possession twice and had been broken out of 
jail once, thanks to the radical group known as the Weather 
Underground. At least the former faculty members were keeping themselves busy.

But by the time Harvard expelled Alpert and Leary, it was already too 
late: the lysergic genie was out of the blotter. A breathless Crimson 
story in 1962 "revealed that sugar cubes impregnated with LSD have 
been sold in the Square." In 1963, a columnist for the newspaper 
called Cambridge "the Drug Capital of the East Coast -- at least for 
your better class of compounds." And in 1967, John U. Monro, then the 
Dean of the College, took the unusual step of informing the Class of 
1970 in a sternly worded letter that, "as anyone bright enough to be 
at Harvard knows perfectly well, possession or distribution of 
marijuana and L.S.D. are strictly against the law." Added Monro, "if 
a student is stupid enough to misuse his time here fooling around 
with illegal and dangerous drugs, our view is that he should leave 
the college." Even Timothy Leary was (briefly) worried: in 1966, he 
suggested that "LSD may be creating a new race of mutants," according 
to an April 23 Crimson report.

But how many students actually used LSD? How populous was Leary's 
"new race"? Roland J. Cole '70, a co-founder and former vice 
president of the Independent, said that fewer students may have been 
"tripping" than many imagined. "LSD, in particular, was a new drug, 
so it got more attention than existing drugs, even though I suspect 
actual use of it by Harvard and Radcliffe students was never very 
widespread," wrote Cole in an e-mail. Taking LSD, Cole suggested, 
became charged with significance at a time when "political and social 
efforts 'to do something different' [and] 'to look at the world in 
new ways'" consumed the campus. Tripping "could be seen as a symbol" 
more than a common pastime, said Cole.

A former Independent editor from the Class of 1973 offered a 
different account from a slightly later period. The former editor, 
who spoke on the condition of anonymity, wrote in an e-mail that "the 
early '70s saw a remarkable confluence of drugs, sex, and rock and 
roll...Psychedelics were certainly to be found in the dorm rooms of 
adherents to the Tim Leary/Ram Dass school of profound spiritual 
exploration as well as the more bacchanalian Ken Kesey/Grateful Dead 
school." But the "bacchanalian" revelry might have had its costs, the 
source said. "Most people survived their experimentations; sadly, 
rumors suggested a few did not." No one said being a mutant would be easy.

Records and Wreckage

However much LSD was actually ingested by Harvard's student body 
during the late '60s and early '70s, a not inconsiderable fraction of 
it wound up in the bloodstream of James Toback '66. Toback, the 
director behind such movies as Two Girls and a Guy, Black and White, 
and most recently, When Will I Be Loved, claims to have taken the 
largest recorded dose of LSD in history -- 100,000 micrograms -- 
while he was an undergraduate here. Unlike some of his peers, Toback 
lived to tell the tale; he even set it to celluloid in his 
semiautobiographical 2001 film Harvard Man, which starred Adrian 
Grenier opposite Sarah Michelle Gellar as a brooding Crimson 
basketball player who drops acid and learns the true meaning of 
madness. In a telephone interview, Toback discussed the experiences 
that inspired the scene.

"No one knew what [LSD] could do," Toback said. "Few people knew 
about it. But [Aldous] Huxley, Alan Watts, the Tibetan Book of the 
Dead: these books were floating around -- all of which made you want 
to try it." (Huxley, the well-known author of Brave New World, and 
Watts, a philosopher with a strong interest in Eastern religions, 
both made public their use of psychedelic drugs in the '60s. The 
Tibetan Book of the Dead, an ancient Buddhist text, was sometimes 
used a "guidebook" for acid trips.)

"I was definitely looking at [LSD] as a potential God connection," 
Toback said. "People were talking about it in religious terms." 
Curious about the mysterious substance, he managed to obtain it from 
a friend who had just returned from Switzerland, home to the 
pharmaceutical company from which the Boston Psychopathic Hospital 
had also purchased its LSD supply. When his friend went through Swiss 
customs, Toback said, an officer asked him to identify his 
hallucinogen-soaked sugar cubes. Told that they were LSD, the officer 
was elated and asked to try out a cube himself. "I'm not sure what 
happened to him," Toback said.

Once he had his hands on the drug, Toback immediately slid into 
excess. "I took this massive dose," he said. "It was nine hours of 
total bliss followed by eight days of indescribable catastrophe -- 
physically, emotionally, and every other way." Tripping intensely but 
enjoyably, he encountered a classmate, a swimmer from Arizona, who 
had himself done LSD once, albeit a much smaller dose. "I told him 
that Earth was the insane asylum of the universe. 'Don't you agree? 
Isn't it [LSD] the answer?'" But the swimmer demurred. Toback grew 
anxious. He asked the swimmer how long his intoxication was supposed 
to last. The answer -- "Sometimes it never ends" -- shattered 
Toback's "bliss" in an instant.

"My self had been disintegrated," he said. "I realized I was just an 
artificial construction. It's like when you're three years old -- 
your brain hasn't formulated a self yet." Behaving erratically, 
succumbing to madness, wandering the streets of Cambridge for eight 
days, Toback came close to the breaking point. "If I knew that by 
killing myself I could end this feeling," he said, "I would blow my 
brains out" -- words that went through his mind at the time and that 
he later gave to Adrian Grenier's character in Harvard Man.

But Toback didn't blow his brains out. Instead, someone came to his 
rescue -- Max Rinkel, the researcher from Boston Psychopathic who 
first brought LSD to the States. "Rinkel saved my life," Toback said. 
"My mother called around and spoke to an internist who found out that 
[Rinkel] was one of originators of LSD." Miraculously, he still lived 
in the area and was willing to administer an antidote to the ailing 
Toback. "No one else would have done it," Toback said. "There was a 
fair chance I would die from the antidote." Rinkel succeeded, 
however, and Toback recovered.

He never did drugs again.

For Toback, LSD served as an agent of what he called "transcendental 
education." "The absolute benefit you get" from the drug, he said, 
"is that you're completely fearless in the face of death afterwards." 
Shuffling off the mortal coil, however bad it might be, could never 
outdo the horror of eight days of tripping.

Perhaps, then, the unnamed undergraduate who ran naked through Quincy 
House will be able to soldier on through his ordeal, even as his 
identity stands revealed and his future falls into the hands of the 
criminal justice system. Perhaps LSD has liberated from petty concerns.

More likely, however, he's terrified. Who wouldn't be? Like Miniver 
Cheevy, it seems, the student was born too late. At Harvard in the 
'50s, he would have been a valuable test subject; in the '60s, he 
would have been a subversive hero. Today, alas, he is nothing but a 
curiosity -- the last desperate champion of a mutant race.

[sidebar]

LSD SIDEBAR: THE FACTS, THE FEELINGS

'Enveloped by All of Nature'

By Jon Liu

Few drugs carry the lifelong stigma -- perhaps literally, given what 
the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV calls 
the Hallucinogen Persisting Perception Disorder -- attached to 
lysergic acid diethylamide. As youthful substance abuse increasingly 
shifts from the recreational to the utilitarian -- marijuana and 
mushrooms replaced by Adderall and Ritalin -- what place is left for 
future "intensified colors, trailing images, perceptions of entire 
objects, afterimages, halos around objects, macropsia, and micropsia"?

A Rye-Bred Escape From a White-Bread World

In 1976, psychologist Linnda R. Carporael proposed a novel 
explanation for the Salem Witch Trials: ergotism. Ergot is a toxic 
fungus commonly found on rye grain; might the witches of Salem -- 
victims of misogyny and superstition, yes -- have also scarfed down 
some particularly nasty bread? Carporael's five-page article in 
Science was audacious, and a bit kooky. "Convulsive ergotism," she 
wrote, "is characterized by a number of symptoms. These include 
crawling sensations in the skin, tingling in the fingers, vertigo, 
tinnitus aurium, headaches, disturbances in sensation, 
hallucination... All...are alluded to in the Salem witchcraft records."

Ergo, ergot poisoning made Salem's nice little girls into witches. 
The '70s may have made this conceivable, even believable. The 
psychoactive ingredient in ergot, you see, is ergotamine, which, 
through hydrolysis, becomes the salt ergotamine tartrate, a 
lysergic-acid derivative that is, in turn, relatively easily 
transformed into LSD itself. Give your average second-year pre-med 
student the proper grounding in orgo, some batches of contaminated 
rye, and access to Google, and, if all goes well and all explosions 
are averted, she'll be either a felon or a tycoon in less than half a 
week. Or online telling her tale.

Consider the "Share Your Experiences" section of , which appears half 
support group, half forum for experimental poetry, and half 
cracked-AARP reminiscence zone (it seems fair to assume that regular 
LSD users experience at least 1.5 times more reality than the rest of us).

Jack from India: "it was in goa.....saw plants turn into 
animals.....wierd faces in the sea....lots of colors all 
around....had a gr8 time." Sunrise from England: "first time 4 purple 
ohms, 27th october 1989, remember gold rain falling from the street 
lights, hands shimmering with colour, willow tree danceing with 
rainbow branches, on the horizon purple and gold stars twinkling, 
mosaic patterns on the walls, could go on." Jimmy from a location 
unknown: "i saw me...... i looked me in the eyes..."

Whether staring at oneself in the eyes is a net positive or negative 
seems impossible to answer without further research. It seems hard to 
argue, however, with the profundity, if not the desirability, of some 
of Liquid Sound Design's more narratively coherent testimonials. "I 
took 2 Jerry Garcia's and a hit of E," writes a user from Oregon. "It 
was like day shifting to night and back really fast in my room. Then 
things divided up into segments of reality, where everything that 
existed was seperate from everything else. It looked like a comic 
book with one depth level and lines cutting out shapes of everything. 
We went to a tree. My friends told me not to stay from the tree, 
which I interpreted in many ways. Someone said the leaves looked like 
slugs, and then everywhere there were slithering slugs. I wasn't 
scared, just fascinated."

If the bright orange pages of Liquid Sound Design seem to signify a 
typically inchoate Internet -- and drug -- society, Erowid.org might 
be its antithesis, and perhaps the end of drug culture as such. 
Looking at its LSD page -- a meticulously organized list of 
histories, warnings, and linked scientific studies -- one can't help 
but feel a twinge of epochal despair. Has Gen-Y succeeded in 
rationalizing and disenchanting even drug use?

Even the testimonials are long and studied. In a college admissions 
essay of a piece titled "Why I'm Never Touching LSD," a teenager 
tells a strangely Kafkaesque tale: "Then K and her parents ran 
upstairs...right through me. 'Oh Shit', I thought 'I was dead.' I ran 
after them and saw my own body on the ground completely still. Then I 
realized that I hadn't been breathing and had no pulse the entire 
time I was downstairs."

Sadder still is the melancholia of A: "[By 1985] I had bought a 
condominium, and was working. I began to realise that I really 
couldn't do this anymore. My life was no longer free and 
uncomplicated. When I would try to trip, I would find myself becoming 
bogged down with worrisome thoughts... such as getting the bills 
payed, making sure I did my tasks at work, suddenly there was just 
too much responsibility..."

The title of A's Erowid piece? "Enveloped By All of Nature, then I 
Joined the Rat Race."

The Comedown

Anecdotally at least, it seems that even some of today's most 
drug-prone Harvardians have decided that the negative consequences of 
acid, disciplinary and psychological, may not be worth the positive.

A junior studying in the humanities told the Indy that he tried LSD 
twice in high school but wouldn't do it again. "It made me have 
paranoid hallucinations both times," he said, "and the second time 
lasted for a very long time and was totally unpleasant." Anyway, he 
reasoned, acid is "not as good as mushrooms [because it's] not 
euphoric" and "not as good as stimulants or sedatives because LSD 
doesn't really make you feel good by messing with those parts of your 
chemistry." Ultimately, the junior concluded, "Drugs that mess with 
your cognition aren't fun; drugs that mess with your mood are great."

As for Soren Siebach, LSD has nonetheless quite likely messed with 
his mood. In an e-mail to the Indy, he wrote that he left Sunday for 
his home in Utah, where he'll have to hold down a full-time job for 
six months before the College will even consider letting him back. An 
official Harvard penalty will be set "only after all the criminal 
stuff is resolved." Asked about the reaction of his friends and 
family, Siebach wrote back curtly, "My family has been as good as I 
could have hoped. I've told as few people about it as possible."
- ---
MAP posted-by: Richard Lake