LSD, Ecstasy, and a Blast of Utopianism: How 1967’s “Summer of Love” All Began

Click here to read “Suddenly That Summer” by Sheila Weller from July 2012’s Vanity Fair.

It was billed as “the Summer of Love,” a blast of glamour, ecstasy, and Utopianism that drew some 75,000 young people to the San Francisco streets in 1967. Who were the true movers behind the Haight-Ashbury happening that turned America on to a whole new age?

A handshake across a chasm of hate

Click here to read “A handshake across a chasm of hate” by Kevin Cullen from The Boston Globe on June 23, 2012.

As far as handshakes go, Martin McGuinness pumping the arm of Queen Elizabeth II is one of those “I never thought I’d see that” moments. Not that you will see it. It’s probably going to happen behind closed doors at a charity event in Belfast next week. Still, that it will happen at all is a ­reminder of how history moves in real time, despite its tendency to repeat ­itself.