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...year later, the tables turned and it was the Terriers that were jilted in the Garden, 5-4, after winning the opener at Wasson Rink, 6-5. B.U. recovered to win the ECAC finals against Harvard...

Author: By William E. Stedman, | Title: Rock Steady | 12/10/1975 | See Source »

...clue to the success of Don Sergio's all-embracing pastorate may lie in the work of a protege, Father William Bryce Wasson. Wasson missed ordination in the U.S. because of poor health, came to Cuernavaca to recuperate, and was ordained by Méndez Arceo. Today he presides over a remarkable orphanage that Psychoanalyst Erich Fromm recently praised as "really rare-an institution that has happy orphans." The secret, says Fromm, is that each of Wasson's 900 orphans knows "he will not be expelled or abandoned for any reason"-yet at the same time...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Roman Catholics: A Joyful Place | 8/29/1969 | See Source »

...true believers contend that anyone who hasn't tried the drugs cannot judge them; anyone who has, will, they claim, be converted to them. The attitude is expressed by R. Gordon Wasson, a man whose pioneering researches on psilocybin-containing mushrooms would lead one to hope for better: "We are all divided," he says, "into classes: those who have taken the mushroom and are disqualified by our subjective experience and those who have not taken the mushroom and are disqualified by their total ignorance of the subject...

Author: By Josiah LEE Auspitz, | Title: The Harvard Review | 5/27/1963 | See Source »

There is another class which Wasson neglects: the scientists who are more committed to science than to the drug experience. Richard Evans Shultes '37, Lecturer on Economic Botany, for instance, has taken mushrooms, morning glory seeds, and many of the forty other hallucinogenic plants which grow in this hemisphere. Yet he retains his ability to discuss the drugs dispassionately in coherent sentences and in paragraphs unencumbered by rhapsodical exclamations. His article, an alphabetically arranged description of "Hallucinogenic Plants in the New World," is the first summary of its kind in a non-technical journal...

Author: By Josiah LEE Auspitz, | Title: The Harvard Review | 5/27/1963 | See Source »

Woodroe's article and those by Zinberg and Shultes and Wasson are very much worth reading. The others may be regarded as curious and timely documents in a controversy which is certain to go beyond Harvard. When it does--and feature articles on the hallucinogens are already being written for several national publications--this issue of the Harvard Review will be an indispensible reference...

Author: By Josiah LEE Auspitz, | Title: The Harvard Review | 5/27/1963 | See Source »

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