TIME Magazine
One sociologist calls them "the Freudian proletariat." Another  observer sees them as "expatriates living on our shores but beyond our  society." Historian Arnold Toynbee describes them as "a red warning  light for the American way of life." For California's Bishop James Pike,  they evoke the early Christians: "There is something about the temper  and quality of these people, a gentleness, a quietness, an  interest—something good." To their deeply worried parents throughout the  country, they seem more like dangerously deluded dropouts, candidates  for a very sound spanking and a cram course in civics—if only they would  return home to receive either. 
Whatever their meaning  and wherever they may be headed, the hippies have emerged on the U.S.  scene in about 18 months as a wholly new subculture, a bizarre  permutation of the middle-class American ethos from which it evolved.  Hippies preach altruism and mysticism, honesty, joy and nonviolence.  They find an almost childish fascination in beads, blossoms and bells,  blinding strobe lights and ear-shattering music, exotic clothing and  erotic slogans. Their professed aim is nothing less than the subversion  of Western society by "flower power" and force of example. 
Although  that sounds like a pipe-dream, it conveys the unreality that permeates  hippiedom, a cult whose mystique derives essentially from the influence  of hallucinogenic drugs. The hippies have popularized a new word,  psychedelic, which the Random House 
Dictionary of English  Language defines as: "Of or noting a mental state of great calm,  intensely pleasureful perception of the senses, esthetic entrancement  and creative impetus; of or noting any of the group of drugs producing  this effect." With those drugs has come the psychedelic philosophy, an  impassioned belief in the self-revealing, mind-expanding powers of  potent weeds and seeds and chemical compounds known to man since  prehistory but wholly alien to the rationale of Western society. Unlike  other accepted stimuli, from nicotine to liquor, the hallucinogens  promise those who take the "trip" a magic-carpet escape from reality in  which perceptions are heightened, senses distorted, and the imagination  permanently bedazzled with visions of Ideological verity. 
Hashish  Trail. From this promise, possibly more exciting—and more  dangerous—than any adventure offered by travel agents, was born the cult  of hippiedom. Its disciples, who have little use for definitions, are  mostly young and generally thoughtful Americans who are unable to  reconcile themselves to the stated values and implicit contradictions of  contemporary Western society, and have become internal emigres, seeking  individual liberation through means as various as drug use, total  withdrawal from the economy and the quest for individual identity. 
Only  last year, many sociologists and psychiatrists dismissed the hippie  hegira with a verbal flick of the wrist. The use of mind-changing drugs  such as LSD, said National Institute of Mental Health Director Stanley  Yolles in 1966, was a fad, "like goldfish swallowing." City officials  blandly waited for the hippies to go away; indeed, a year ago they had  established scarcely half a dozen inchoate colonies in the U.S. 
Today, hippie enclaves are blooming in