The Strange Case of the Harvard Drug Scandal
Andrew T. Weil
Look Magazine, November 5, 1963
ON MAY 27 1963, President Nathan M. Pusey of Harvard University
announced that an assistant professor of clinical psychology and education had
been fired. This was the first faculty firing since Pusey took office in 1953,
and it had overtones of the sensational. The man dismissed was Dr. Richard
Alpert, a young psychologist, member of Harvard's Social Relations department
and son of George Alpert, former president of the New Haven Railroad.
Shortly after his appointment to the Harvard faculty in
1958, Alpert had become interested in the psychological effects of a group of
drugs that have since been well publicized: the hallucinogens or
psychotomimetics substances producing hallucinations and peculiar changes of
consciousness when taken by normal persons. One of these, peyote, is a cactus
found in the vicinity of the Rio Grande that has been used ceremonially for
many years by North American Indians. Aldous Huxley and numerous other writers
have carefully described the startling effects of its active principle,
mescaline. Other hallucinogenic drugs are psilocybin, which was first isolated
from a species of Mexican mushroom in 1958, and LSD-25, synthesized in 1938
from a compound in a fungus attacking rye, but not discovered to have
hallucinogenic properties until 1943.
Supported by the
Harvard Center for Research in Personality, Richard Alpert, with his associate
Dr. Timothy F. Leary, a lecturer on clinical psychology, set out to
investigate the new drugs.
Thus began, quietly and
respectably, a series of events that was to lead to the formation of a cult of
chemical mystics, and was to involve state, Federal and Mexican authorities in
a whirl of investigations and lead, ultimately, to the academic downfall of
both Richard Alpert and Timothy Leary.
Many scientists had
studied hallucinogenic drugs before 1960, but most of them were physicians,
interested in determining physiological effects or in using the drugs to
reproduce, under laboratory conditions, the symptoms of mental illness. LSD,
particularly, was widely employed in the early 1950's to cause "model
psychoses" in normal subjects, and there was some hope that these experiments
would point to an understanding of the chemical basis of schizophrenia.
Unfortunately, these early efforts produced little new or valuable
information. The biochemistry of the drugs remains to be worked out, and the
dream of understanding the chemical nature of mental illness has not
materialized.
Today, there is very little medical research
with the hallucinogens. But the medical studies indirectly gave rise to
another kind of interest in the drugs. Many of the people who served as
subjects were overwhelmed by the experience. Some-especially artists, students
and creative writers-called it the most significant experience of their lives.
A few set about popularizing the hallucinogens in magazine articles and books,
and stimulated considerable nonprofessional curiosity.
The
bulk of the medical evidence indicated that LSD, mescaline and psilocybin were
not physically dangerous. Certainly, they could not cause addiction. There
were, however, alarming reports of temporary acute mental damage that resulted
from taking the drugs, and hints that unsupervised use of them could lead to
permanent adverse psychological changes. For example, in one of the early
experiments, at the Harvard Medical School, a student volunteer subject under
LSD was almost killed when he walked into rush-hour traffic on Boston's
Huntington Avenue, "believing he was God and nothing could touch him."
Descriptions of the drugs stressed such effects as heightened perceptions,
increased awareness of one's surroundings, tremendous insights into one's own
mind, accelerated thought processes, intense religious feelings, even
extrasensory phenomena and mystic rapture.
In more clinical
terms. the hallucinogens cause bizarre hallucinations (primarily visual),
delusions and unusual mental states. But the effects vary strikingly from
person to person and from time to time in the same individual. making it
impossible to define a "typical" drug experience.
For "investigational use only."
LSD, mescaline and psilocybin are all
commonly taken by mouth, and all are similar in their action on the mind. An
LSD intoxication lasts from eight to ten hours, compared to eight to twelve
for mescaline and four to six for psilocybin. All of the compounds are legally
classified for "investigational use only" under Federal food and drug laws,
which means they can be obtained and used only by "experts qualified by
scientific training and experience to investigate the safety and effectiveness
of drugs." In addition, Massachusetts and some other states have enacted
restrictive legislation. The possession of mescaline or peyote by persons
other than qualified researchers is a felony under Massachusetts law. (Food
and drug laws do not define the adjective "qualified," and though a number of
physicians have urged that it be taken to mean "qualified by possession of the
M.D. degree," psychologists and others are not necessarily banned from
studying investigational drugs.)
Before February. 1963. when
the thalidomide disaster brought a tightening of Federal regulations on
investigational drugs, nearly anyone could purchase hallucinogenic compounds
for research purposes. Several American chemical companies supplied mescaline
at about four dollars per dose. Researchers could obtain LSD and psilocybin at
nominal prices from Sandoz, Inc., a Swiss drug company with branch offices in
Hanover, N. J. Distributors of investigational drugs were expected to
determine the qualifications of persons they supplied by asking purchasers to
complete brief forms outlining their educational backgrounds, research
facilities and proposed investigations. With its limited staff, however, the
Food and Drug Administration could make only occasional spot checks of the
files of companies suspected of violations.
Students were fascinated
Alpert and Leary ordered psilocybin from
Sandoz, Inc., in 1960. Although neither of the researchers was an M.D. (both
had Ph.D.'s in clinical psychology), their respectable Harvard connections and
apparently sound research proposals convinced Sandoz of their reliability.
Unlike past investigators of hallucinogens, Alpert and Leary
intended to study the mental and emotional effects that appealed to
intellectuals and artists. They were sure that "negative reactions" to the
drugs (such as severe paranoia or temporary psychosis) were due entirely to
the way in which the chemicals were administered. They felt that if one took
psilocybin in an aesthetic setting with the expectation of having a wonderful
time, the results would be different.
Though hallucinogens
in 1960 were still too esoteric for most people to have heard of them, they
exerted a strange fascination on college students. Only a few Harvard students
knew what mescaline and psilocybin were, but there was a fear that a
university drug project might make others curious enough to use the compounds.
It seemed fortunate that Alpert and Leary planned to work most unobtrusively
under the auspices of a responsible research organization-the Center for
Research in Personality.
Leary had first come across
hallucinogenic drugs at a "mushroom party" in Mexico when friends persuaded
him to eat psilocybin containing mushrooms. He was overwhelmed by the
"consciousness broadening" powers of the drugs.
No one
seemed to realize the extent to which Alpert and Leary were committed to the
value of the drug experience before they had done extensive testing. Both were
subsequently convinced that the mystic insight one could get from psilocybin
would be the solution to the emotional problems of Western man. In their view
of the world, all human behavior consisted of "games," each with its rules,
jargon and rituals.
Thus, one played the "doctor game," the
"lawyer game," even the "psychotic game." The trouble, according to Alpert and
Leary, was that Westerners are unable to see that they are merely playing
games, and consequently get bogged down in one particular "role." It followed
that the key to understanding life and to integrating one's life successfully
with one's environment was to develop the ability to see one's activities as
games. As Leary said in a 1961 speech, ". . . only that rare Westerner we call
'mystic' or who has had a visionary experience of some sort sees clearly the
game structure of behavior." This reduced the search for happiness in life to
finding a way to induce visionary experience. Taking hallucinogenic drugs was
the simplest method.
At the beginning, Alpert and Leary
administered psilocybin to 38 people: professional and non-professional normal
volunteers, outstanding creative intellectuals and psychological drug
"addicts." To produce the most positive reactions to psilocybin, the two
experimenters ran their studies in "pleasant, spacious, aesthetic
surroundings." Subjects were allowed to control their own dosages (within
reasonable limits); no one took the drug among strangers, and Leary and Alpert
usually took it with their subjects. The "outstanding creative intellectuals"
included Aldous Huxley, Allen Ginsberg and William Burroughs. Seventy-five
percent of the subjects reported that the psilocybin experience was "very
pleasant." Sixty nine percent "were judged to have attained marked broadening
of awareness." More subjects were tested (167 in all ), and the percentage of
positive reactions rose still higher. Ninety-five percent thought that the
drug session" had changed their lives for the better."
Alpert and Leary began mimeographing these statistics for distribution to the
center staff. They predicted the use of psilocybin in psychotherapy ("instant
psychoanalysis"), called it an aid to creative development and envisioned its
regular use in a Harvard graduate seminar. "The students," wrote Leary, "will
take psilocybin once a month and spend the intervening class sessions applying
the insights to problems in their field."
Alpert and Leary
began calling psilocybin and its sister hallucinogens
''consciousness-expanding materials" to avoid prejudices against the word
"drug." Many Harvard students listened, grew curious and wanted to try for
themselves.
By 1961, Alpert and Leary had a second project
under way: the rehabilitation of imitates at a local prison through psilocybin
"therapy." Again, the investigators consumed the drug with the subjects. They
later reported that psilocybin enabled the prisoners to see themselves as
players in the "cops-and-robbers game."
Arguments over methods
By this time, the investigators were heading
toward trouble. Intradepartmental opponents of the project charged that Alpert
and Leary gave the drugs in sessions resembling cocktail parties, that they
were slipshod in collecting data and that they were in no position to make
observations when they themselves were drugged. The psychologists countered
with the assertion that no one was qualified to observe people under the
influence of psilocybin unless he was in the same state and thus able to know
what his subjects were feeling.
Meanwhile, an increasing
number of students began to try to locate sources of mescaline and to ask how
they could get to be subjects in the psilocybin research. The University
Administration did not become really alarmed until two undergraduates landed
in mental hospitals after taking one or another of the drugs. There was, of
course, no way of proving that the drugs had contributed to the breakdowns.
But when the dean's office checked into recent affairs at the Center for
Research in Personality. it didn't like what it found. David C. McClelland,
director of the center, vouched for the soundness of the study, however, and
the parents of the two hospitalized students wanted everything kept quiet.
Harvard may have wished to dissociate itself from the drug project in 1961,
but it had no grounds on which to act.
In the fall of 1961,
the university took a significant step to protect its most vulnerable
students. It extracted an agreement from Alpert and Leary that no
undergraduates would be used in their research. But following its historic
tradition of noninterference with members of the university faculty, Harvard
put no other restrictions on Alpert and Leary.
Whenever they
spoke to university officials, the two psychologists gave highly creditable
accounts of their research, always emphasizing that since the things they were
studying were unorthodox, their procedures had to be unorthodox. In private
however, Alpert and Leary chafed under the prohibition against using
undergraduates and ridiculed the stuffiness of regulations that restrained
their "applied mysticism."
More and more students tried to
ferret out sources of the hallucinogens; some succeeded. A chemical supply
house in New York City was selling mescaline at $35 a gram, (about two doses)
more than four times the normal trade price. Another Manhattan firm sold the
drug at regular prices to undergraduates. Knowing the authorities would never
get around to checking up, it let the students fill out the brief FDA forms.
One student ordered quantities of dried peyote from a Texas shipper and
dispensed it to his classmates at reasonable rates. A parcel of LSD
impregnated sugar cubes arrived from New York. The cubes sold for one dollar
apiece on the burgeoning Harvard Square black market.
Alpert
and Leary believed that the Government did not have the right to deny citizens
the freedom to explore their own consciousness. "Internal freedom" was as
important as the external freedoms of speech and religion, they asserted. To
shut off access to consciousness-expanding materials was a step toward
totalitarianism.
Not many outside Harvard's Social Relations
Department had yet heard of Alpert and Leary. Although the coterie of
interested undergraduates was growing, it represented only a tiny fraction of
the students. The first "leak" was an article on mescaline and psilocybin
published in the February 20,1962, issue of The Harvard Crimson, the
university's daily student newspaper. It gave a sketchy description of the
work going on at the center and compared psilocybin to the soma of Huxley's
Brave New World. "Ethical and philosophical questions raised by the
availability of such a compound are staggering in complexity, yet they will
have to be faced," the article concluded. "The work going on now in Cambridge
may force us to find answers to them in the very near future."
The researchers reply
The very near future turned out to be just
around the corner. Alpert and Leary immediately sent a letter to The Crimson,
explaining that they were not "unbounded in their enthusiasm" for psilocybin,
as the article had stated, but rather unbounded in their concern "concern for
the many problems created by the consciousness expanding drugs." They
emphasized that their research was carefully controlled and in strict
adherence to university codes. "All subjects are informed volunteers. No
undergraduates or minors."
A few days later, the director of
Harvard University Health Services, Dr. Dana L. Farnsworth, wrote a letter of
his own to The Crimson, in which he suggested that mescaline could do a great
deal of harm. "Actually," he wrote, "the ingestion of this drug can
precipitate psychotic reactions in some apparently normal persons. It has been
known to increase slight depressions into suicidal ones and to produce
schizophrenic like reactions."
The little skirmish in The
Crimson's mail column encouraged critics of the psilocybin project to speak
out. The resulting dispute led to a private meeting for all members of the
Center for Research in Personality on March 14, 1962. Sitting quietly in the
room, unknown to the organizers of the discussion, was a reporter for the
Crimson.
Herbert C. Kelman, lecturer on social psychology,
summed up the feelings of the hostile faction. "The program," he argued, "has
an anti-intellectual atmosphere. Its emphasis is on pure experience, not on
verbalizing findings." He also charged that graduate students who had
participated in the project had formed an insider sect that considered
nonparticipants square. Others accused Alpert and Leary of running
irresponsible, party like psilocybin sessions and of ignoring or
underestimating possible permanent psychological damage to subjects. Leary
defended his unorthodox research methods; Alpert pointed out that Health
Services physicians were on 24-hour call in case they were needed.
The Crimson's account of the stormy meeting touched off violent
reactions. Participants in the center debate, including Dr. Kelman, strongly
protested the newspaper's intrusion on a private meeting. Other faculty
members who had not previously heard of the controversy over psilocybin now
joined the battle.
The squabble had gotten out of the
family, and the Harvard administration was apprehensive. Quickly, the Boston
newspapers seized on the affair. A psychopharmacologist in the Massachusetts
Public Health Department expressed the belief that one person not under the
influence of the drug should be present during all experiments. On March 20,
five days after The Crimson's first story appeared. the state food and drug
division announced that it had launched an investigation of psilocybin
research at Harvard.
President Pusey said that the
university planned no investigation of its own and added that he was confident
David McClelland, director of the center, would satisfy the state inspectors.
Other Harvard officials said they had not interfered with the project because
to have done so would have been an abridgment of academic freedom. Dr. Dana
Farnsworth stated that University Health Services had not taken any action
because there was no evidence of any direct harm to any individual involved."
Legal issues arose. The deputy commissioner of the Health
Department told reporters he thought psilocybin fell into the category of
drugs that had to be administered by a physician. He explained that state law
permitted physicians alone to administer "hypnotic or somnifacient"
(sleep-producing) drugs. If psilocybin was a "harmful drug" under
Massachusetts law, he warned, "those who gave it would be subject to
prosecution even if they had discontinued their work."
One inquiry ends
The state finished its inquiry in mid-April. It
decided that the psilocybin research could go on if simple medical precautions
were taken, and it dropped the matter of the legality of work done before
March, 1962. The only demand the state made was that a licensed physician be
present when the drug was actually administered; he would not have to stay for
the whole of the session The Crimson reported: "Massachusetts authorities have
apparently adopted a friendly attitude toward the research and are insisting
on medical precautions in order not to violate state laws or upset public
opinion." It seemed that the storm had blown over.
The
appointments of both Alpert and Leary were to expire on June 30, l963, and
Harvard's governing body-the Corporation-had voted not to renew their terms.
This meant the two psychologists would be around for only one more year, with
further trouble unlikely. In May, 1962, the Center for Research in Personality
named a faculty committee to "advise and oversee" future work with psilocybin.
Alpert happily agreed to the idea, commenting, "We hope to establish
guidelines to make us and the rest of the university comfortable about the
project."
But several persons were distinctly unhappy. One
was Alfred J. Murphy, senior food and drug inspector of the Health Department,
who had supervised the state inquiry. Sadly, he recalled how Harvard had
thwarted him in the late 1950's after his office learned that an undergraduate
had a supply of peyote. When Murphy arrived on campus with a search warrant,
the university seemed to him to be using every trick possible to delay him
until the student had disposed of the illegal drug. Murphy said he had run
into a similar faculty conspiracy to protect the Alpert and Leary psilocybin
project.
A committee gives up
Also unhappy were the Harvard people appointed to
the faculty advisory committee on psilocybin research. One of the first things
they urged was that Alpert turn over his full supply of psilocybin to
University Health Services for safekeeping. When Alpert said he would keep
some for "personal use," the committee members insisted he relinquish all of
his drugs. Alpert vehemently told them he had a "citizen's right" to have and
use all the psilocybin he wanted. The committee gave up. It never met again.
One Harvard junior told a friend that Alpert had persuaded
him to take psilocybin in a "self exploratory" session at Alpert's apartment.
Alpert tried out a new short-acting hallucinogen, dimethyltryptamine (DMT); he
gave it to himself by injection, found he could stay "up" for thirty blissful
minutes, and reported it was "like taking an internal shower." An
undergraduate group was conducting covert research with mescaline. There were
stories of students and others using hallucinogens for seductions, both
heterosexual and homosexual.
Farnsworth called Alpert in and
demanded that he turn over his entire stock of psilocybin for safekeeping
during the summer. Alpert reluctantly complied. Later, by accident, Farnsworth
found out that Alpert had not given him everything. He had kept a batch for
himself and had supplied some to an outside institution. There was as well
evidence of Leary's having used Harvard stationery to order more psilocybin
from Sandoz.
To get away from it all, Alpert, Leary and
friends took off for Mexico, where they had rented for the summer a resort
hotel in the seaside town of Zihuatanejo, near Acapulco. People interested in
exploring their consciousness joined them. Some Harvard students dropped in.
The Alpert and Leary who returned to Cambridge in the fall
of 1962 were noticeably different from the men who had embarked on an
interesting research project in 1960. The old Alpert had said his greatest
ambition was to get a tenured position at Harvard. The new one said he
couldn't care less that the Corporation had not renewed his appointment; the
university was petty, uninteresting and closed-minded. Both Alpert and Leary
seemed determined to show everyone they had the answer to man's problems. And
if the university refused to listen, they would take their arguments to the
public.
Within a few weeks of the opening of the fall
semester, the campaign began. The two maintained the drugs offered hope to an
ailing society, but warned that there were those who wanted to suppress
information about them and keep them unavailable. The issue, they said, was
whether anyone had a right to prevent you from experiencing the ecstasy of
consciousness expansion. Everyone had to fight for "internal freedom."
In October, Leary dramatically announced the formation of a
private organization, the International Federation for Internal Freedom, to
carry on the fight. It would "encourage, support and protect research on
psychedelic (mind manifesting) sub stances." Students were encouraged to join
and form "research cells," through which they would eventually be able to
obtain and use the drugs.
Consciousness expansion became the
most popular subject of dinner table conversation at Harvard. A few
undergraduates took the university's rugged introductory organic chemistry
course solely to develop the skill necessary to synthesize mescaline. And to
capitalize on the vast market that had been created in Cambridge, a new
character appeared in Harvard Square: the professional "junk" peddler. Instead
of pushing morphine or heroin, salesmen offered high-grade marijuana,
mescaline and sugar cubes with LSD in them.
The university,
through John Monro, dean of Harvard College, and Dana Farnsworth of the Health
Services, issued a stern warning to undergraduates that hallucinogenic drugs
"may result in serious hazard to the mental health and stability even of
apparently normal persons." A few days later, Monro called the drugs "a
serious psychiatric hazard" and added, "I don't like anyone urging our
undergraduates to use them."
When this appeared in The
Crimson, Alpert and Leary in reply labeled the warnings "reckless and
inaccurate," scientifically. They said there was no reason to believe "that
consciousness-expanding drug experiences are any more dangerous than
psychoanalysis or a four-year enrollment in Harvard College." They predicted
that "the control and expansion of consciousness" would be a "major
civil-liberties issue of the next decade." Finally, they defended their own
use of the drugs and exhorted Harvard men to "place your trust not in Dean
Monro's 'grown-up responsibility of faculty members' (including the authors of
this letter) but in the scientific data and in your own experienced judgment."
On the day the Alpert-Leary letter was printed, the director
of the Boston branch of the Federal Food and Drug Administration announced
that the FDA had begun an investigation of possible illegal sales in Cambridge
of mescaline, psilocybin and LSD. The situation seemed as black as it had been
the previous spring.
Then the university had another
surprise: Alpert was going to be around longer than expected. He had received
a verbal promise of a one year appointment at the Graduate School of Education
from the dean of the school. The university felt obligated to honor this
commitment, and on January 7,1963, the Corporation voted a year's extension to
Alpert.
Little more than a week later, Leary announced a
program for the International Federation for Internal Freedom-known as IFIF.
The organization had applied for incorporation and was starting to set up
branch centers in cities across the country IFlF's biggest project was the
establishment of a summer "Freedom Center" in Mexico at the resort the
Alpert-Leary group had taken over in 1962. A closer to home undertaking was
"an experiment in multifamilial living" that began with the purchase of a
spacious house on Kenwood Avenue in suburban Newton.
Meditation in Newton
Alpert, Leary and his young daughters, a married
Harvard senior with wife and baby, and several friends moved into the house to
form a "transcendental community," where they could "maintain a level of
experience which cuts beyond routine ego and social games.' One feature of the
house was a specially constructed "meditation room," accessible solely by a
ladder. The only furnishings were mattresses and cushions on the floor. A tiny
light gave just enough illumination to see the Buddha statue in one corner.
The fragrance of incense completed the effect. To this room, residents of the
house came frequently for "active meditation," whether drug-induced or not.
Otherwise, they led casual, if unusual, lives. The students went to their
classes and did their work (except when they found themselves involuntarily
"turned on" something that happened occasionally to people who took the drugs
regularly.
Alpert continued to conduct his course in
motivation at Harvard for undergraduates and graduates. Leary taught his
graduate seminars in research methods. And IFIF executives took care of
official correspondence. Anyone who wandered into the house in Newton was
welcome to stay, meditate or move in.
In February, IFIF
began mailing packets of literature to Harvard undergraduates. graduate
students, faculty and anyone else interested. Each got a resume of the
Alpert-Leary psilocybin experiments on over 400 subjects ("91 per cent of our
subjects enjoyed pleasant experiences; about 66 per cent reported insights and
positive life-change"). A covering letter gave the assurance that this
research had been "congenially separated" from Harvard in the fall of 1962.
There was an application blank for membership in IFIF (dues, $10 per year) and
another blank for joining the Freedom Center in Mexico, during the summer of
1963 at $200 a month for room and board ("half rates for children").
Alpert had been fund raising among wealthy citizens of
Boston and New York. He would interest them in his work, introduce them to the
drug experience, then urge them to contribute to IFIF. Many did. Meantime a
second "multifamilial dwelling" opened in Newton, and IFIF-Los Angeles began
operations. Alpert and Leary went on radio in Boston to explain their mission.
The city of Newton was not converted. In March, Alpert was
accused of violating the housing code's ban on multifamily dwellings.
Neighbors had complained of strange goings-on. Local residents were sure that
the inhabitants of the big white house on Kenwood Avenue practiced everything
from free love to communism. Alpert claimed his transcendental community was a
single-family unit "in a larger sense." He has not been bothered since.
In April, Leary, without giving any formal notice to the
university, disappeared from Cambridge. He turned up shortly afterward in Los
Angeles. President Pusey and the dean of the faculty took the matter to the
Harvard Corporation, which promptly relieved Leary of teaching duties and
stopped his salary. Leary wrote to David McClelland, explaining that he had
been "on leave" from the university. He hinted at a suit if he were not
reinstated.
The university had other problems. Couriers were
now bringing drugs to Harvard each weekend, and more and more students were
experimenting for themselves to see if Alpert and Leary had the right idea.
One could arrange to buy marijuana and mescaline in local sandwich shops. The
newest fad, which sprouted in May, was the consumption of morning-glory seeds,
supposed to cause visions and all the rest.
About mid-May,
the university decided Alpert and Leary had become intolerable. Armed with a
list of sources of information on the two, the dean of the faculty and the
dean of the college set out to investigate.
One senior talked
Patiently, they assured each person they questioned
that no action would be taken against students; they only wanted facts on
Alpert and Leary. To their discouragement, all but one of the people involved
refused to help. Most showed absolute allegiance to the two psychologists. One
senior, who thought that others had talked, told the deans that Alpert had
given him psilocybin in a personal session in 1962. It was just what the
university was looking for.
On Tuesday, May 14,1963,
President Pusey called Alpert into his office and charged him with giving an
undergraduate psilocybin, in defiance of the prohibition on using
undergraduates in his research, and then later assuring officers of the
university that he had not given the drug to any undergraduate after the
prohibition went into effect. Alpert admitted that he had done it, but said
that the incident had not been part of his research; it was an extracurricular
affair, quite apart from the concerns of the university. President Pusey
disagreed. He told Alpert he would bring before the Corporation at its next
meeting the matter of the termination of Alpert's contract.
The following day, Alpert wrote a long letter to Pusey and the members of the
Corporation in which he explained the importance of his research and urged the
university not to oppose the exploration of man's consciousness. The
Corporation, unconvinced, voted on Monday, May 27, to terminate both of
Alpert's appointments (the one that was to expire June 30, 1963, and the
School of Education appointment that was to run through 1964) immediately.
The Crimson applauded the university's action in a special
edition. "In firing Richard Alpert," the paper editorialized, " Harvard has
dissociated itself not only from flagrant dishonesty but also from behavior
that is spreading infection throughout the academic community."
Alpert responded with the announcement that he and Leary would now
devote full time to IFIF and that IFIF had just moved its offices from Boston
to Cambridge-two blocks from Harvard Square. "We welcome anyone interested,"
Alpert wrote The Crimson, but added that, because of restrictive FDA
regulations, "we will continue an active research and training program in
Mexico."
Harvard considered its responsibilities in the
matter discharged.
Alpert and Leary had opened their Mexican
Freedom Center. Irked by reports of odd happenings at Zihuatanejo, the Mexican
Government in June gave the whole IFIF group five days to leave the country.
Reluctantly, Alpert and Leary returned to Cambridge, looking, they said, for
another country in which to carry on.