Word: acidity
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...Oklahoma, two psychiatrists and a zoologist pumped an elephant full of lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD), a psychotomimetic drug. According to the latest issue of Science, they chose the subject for the experiment "because of his remarkable intelligence, his extended life span, his capacity for highly organized group relationships, and his extraordinary psychobiology in general. His fate was horrible and brief...
...fact that TIM does not always draw De Gaulle with pen and acid is a conversation piece in French journalism and politics. For TIM works for L'Express, a newspaper that views De Gaulle through beady eyes from the left. It is said that one of TIM's fellow workers has refused to shake his hand ever since the cartoonist shook le grand Charles's hand at a reception. "I think I'm the only one who draws him as if he were seeing himself," says TIM. "If there's humor...
...years, Durchanek has been a maker of frames, a therapist in a mental hospital, and a landscape gardener. From the hospital he learned the dark side of life, which finds expression in sculptures of bitterness and anger, of delicate poignancy, and occasionally of acid satire...
Tuesday night Dean Monro and Dana L. Farnsworth, director of the Health Services, wrote a letter to the CRIMSON warning undergraduates of the danger of what they called "mind-distorting" drugs such as L.S.D. (lysergic acid diethy-lamide), psilocybin, and mescaline...
...theater had a repertory of more than a thousand one-acters. Severed heads thudded regularly to the Grand Guignol boards, bit players were cooked in acid, and one character regularly had her face pushed down onto a red-hot stove, where it sizzled deliciously. In a great favorite called The Laboratory of Hallucinations, a surgeon operated on the brain of his wife's lover, pinching here, clamping there, until he had turned the fellow utterly mad. The patient then got up off the table and drove a chisel through the doctor's forehead. Audiences used to faint, shriek...