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View Full Version : Ken Kesey -- rubber tramps



forrest
07-07-2008, 03:39 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ken_Kesey

http://www.lib.virginia.edu/small/exhibits/sixties/kesey.html

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4ilnADvT2s&feature=related

KEN KESEY -- RUBBER TRAMPS
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KKRBRozJPl4&feature=related

shaggy
07-09-2008, 06:20 PM
Howdy Forrest,

Ken Kesey's son Zane offers some cool goodies on his website:

Key-Z Productions
Merry Prankster items from Zane Kesey <http://www.key-z.com/>

Pax,
Shaggy
*****

forrest
07-11-2008, 11:41 AM
Howdy Forrest,

Ken Kesey's son Zane offers some cool goodies on his website:

Key-Z Productions
Merry Prankster items from Zane Kesey <http://www.key-z.com/>

Pax,
Shaggy
*****

Hows it goin? Thanks for the links!
http://www.key-z.com/

http://www.key-z.com/books.html

lotuslizard
01-25-2010, 06:35 PM
the rubber tramps documentary might be my favorite film. next to easy rider.
whoever hasn't seen it should!!!:hippie:

forrest
05-18-2010, 07:17 PM
Fascism wants Baptism coast to coast. ---Ken Kesey

If you're a Conservative, why aren't you behind conserving the land? ---Ken Kesey

It's time to move on to the next step in the psychedelic revolution. We've reached a certain point, but we're not moving any more. ---Ken Kesey

Listen, wait, and be patient. Every shaman knows you have to deal with the fire that's in your audience's eye.---Ken Kesey

People don't want other people to get high, because if you get high, you might see the falsity of the fabric of the society we live in.---Ken Kesey

The frontiers we broke into in the '60s are still largely unexplored.---Ken Kesey

The Haight is just a place; the '60s was a spirit.---Ken Kesey

When we first broke into that forbidden box in the other dimension, we knew we had discovered something as surprising and powerful as the New World when Columbus came stumbling onto it.---Ken Kesey

forrest
08-10-2010, 11:05 AM
IN 1959, KEN Kesey, a graduate student in creative writing at Stanford University, volunteered to take part in a government drug research program at Menlo Park Veterans Hospital that tested a variety of psychoactive drugs such as LSD, which was legal at the time, psilocybin, mescaline, and amphetamine IT-290. Over a period of several weeks, Kesey ingested these hallucinogens and wrote of his drug-induced experiences for government researchers. From this experience, Kesey wrote his most celebrated novel, One Flew Over The Cuckoo's Nest, and began his own experimentations with psychedelic drugs. His goal was to break through conformist thought and ultimately forge a reconfiguration of American society.
Psychedelic 60s: Ken Kesey & the Merry Pranksters (http://www2.lib.virginia.edu/exhibits/sixties/kesey.html)