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William Leonard Pickard (born October 21, 1945) is one of two people convicted in the largest lysergic acid diethylamide (LSD) manufacturing case in history. In 2000, while moving their LSD laboratory across Kansas, Pickard and Clyde Apperson were pulled over while driving a Ryder rental truck and a follow car.
Gordon Todd Skinner, who was known by his friends as Todd, [1] grew up in Tulsa, Oklahoma.His biological father was Gordon H. Skinner, a chiropractor.Skinner's mother was a businesswoman named Katherine Magrini, who ran a spring manufacturer, Gardner Springs Company [2] and a candy company, Katherine's Spring Gourmet Chocolates.
William Leonard Pickard earned a scholarship to Princeton University but dropped out after one term, instead preferring to hang out at Greenwich Village jazz clubs in New York City. In 1971, he got a job as a research manager at the University of California, Berkeley in the Department of Bacteriology and Immunology, a job he held until 1974.
LSD chemist William Leonard Pickard contributed to Sand's legal defense fund. [28] Sand fled to Canada in 1976, evading imprisonment. [6] LSD historian Mark McCloud reports that Sand then traveled to the ashram of so-called "sex guru" Rajneesh in west India. Sand eventually returned to North America, again producing large quantities of LSD. [29]
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Pickard will begin his tenure on June 1. "I am honored and excited to continue my journey with Eastern Iowa Community Colleges," said Dr. Jeremy Pickard. "EICC has been my home for over two ...
Pickard is a surname, an Anglicised version of Picard, originally meaning a person from Picardy, a historical region and cultural area of France. Notable people with the surname include: Al Pickard (1895–1975), Canadian ice hockey administrator and president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey Association
Heads offers an analysis of American psychedelic counterculture and its effects on mainstream American society. Jarnow describes the Grateful Dead and their concerts as a kind of loosely organized infrastructure for American counterculture, detailing how the band and their fans were inextricably linked to LSD distribution from the 1960s through the 1990s.