But inside the tree's roots is something called ibogaine — a controlled … the iboga tree in The Conservatory was healthy enough to produce ibogaine.
Miami University faculty members could lose jobs over psychedelic plant in conservatory
The plant is called the iboga tree. It's grown in Africa and used in coming-of-age rituals. Cathy Wagner is the president of the American Association of …
A DEA Visit, A Psychedelic Plant, And A Controversy Bloom At Miami University
Organizations are pushing back against Miami University in Ohio after a plant put two tenured faculty members’ jobs at risk.
In December, Miami University Provost Phyllis Callahan suspended tenured Professors John Cinnamon and Daniel Gladish. Months later, they were informed their positions could be terminated, causing an uproar from the academic community.
Cinnamon and Gladish’s employment was called into question after the Miami University Police Department and Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) found an Iboga tree ...
MU AAUP chapter protests severity of professors’ punishment
Cinnamon and Gladish suspended for hallucinogenic-producing plant
Two tenured Miami University Hamilton professors, John Cinnamon and Daniel Gladish, face termination for growing a tree that has the ability to produce a hallucinogenic substance in the Miami University Hamilton Conservatory. But, the Miami chapter of the American Association of University Professors (AAUP) is protesting the severity of the professors’ punishment.
According to letters sent to Cinnamon and Gladish from Miami ...
Drug-related plant at Miami's Conservatory jeopardizes professors' jobs
“As you are aware, I was hired as conservatory manager some nine years after the Tabernanthe iboga tree was brought to the Conservatory.
