Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, May 30, 1973 Page Eight THE SUMMER DAILY Wednesday, May 30, 1973 Ritual By PAT LEISNER Associated Press Writer DAYTONA BEACH, Fla-Late last month the body of 17-year- old Ross "Mike" Cochran w a s 'found in a thicket of scrub pine and palmetto outside town. It was a bloody pulp, battered by heavy chains and slashed by jagged glass. The verdict of police is that Cochran was the victim of devil worshippers: killed in a frenz- ied sacrificial ritual while strap- ped to an altar in the basement of a broken-down apartment dubbed "roach haven" by i t s young residents. IN THE WEEK after the body was found, police arrested 10 young beach drifters and charg- ed them with first-degree murder in the death of the Fresno, Calif., youth who worked as a money- Changer in a pinball arcade. In- vestigators termed it a Black Mass sacrifice, but at the same time said Cochran's f a 1 s e boasts about being an undercover narcotics agent may have weigh- ed heavily in his death. The killing was the latest in a series of murders linked to devil worship - two cases were re- ported by police in New Jersey in the past 18 months - and raised anew questions about a multi- million-dollar occult revival sweeping the country. In the past decade witchcraft slayings signal has emerged from underground goer, says weirdos are screened as a religious phenomenon with out and only one of every 50 ap- broad-based appeal to scholars, plicants is accepted. Membership self-proclaimed witches, devil cards were stopped at 15,000. worshippers and the disenchanted "We weed out people who be- subculture. lieve in blood sacrifice or are involved with drugs" she said. BOTH students and practition- "Drugs, rape and stealing are ers cite psychic powers to probe taboo. But curses and hexes are the human mind, but vehement- permitted." ly deny any connection between The renaissance first became the field and murder. apparent in the astrology boom Bill Heim, a University of South Florida professor and long-time student of the occult, calls such 'A long-time Stude acts "the idiot fringe of occult- A l - ism." acterizes ritual sla "It sounds like kids turned on u turned slay by weird tales on dime store kidst on by magazine racks picturing young store magazine rack women with their guts torn out by werewolves," he said. women with their gt AND THE same goes for An- wolves." ton La Vey, the colorful "black Pope" and founder of the popu- of a few yars back. Today it lar First Church of Satan in San o farsback.oT d ysi- Francisco, which is legally re- has stretched to the edge of ad- cognized by the state of Califor- ence in fields of paraposychology nia. and extrasensory perception. "Saying 'the devil made me do it' is a dangerous cover-up, an AND FROM San Francisco and excuse people use for their ac- New York City the occultists have tions," said Sharon Hansen, 21, gravitated inland gaining new a follower of La Vey. footholds in Minnesota and ten- "We believe in gratifying one's tral Florida. self-indulgence in the seven dead- A single publisher, Llewellyn ly sins" she added. "There's no Publications of Minneapolis, abstinence or sacrifice in satan- claims a record million dollar ism." business last year in serious oc- HANSEN, a five-year church- cult literature. occult revival A $12 text that 10 years ago FLAGELLATIONS are part of sold 500 copies today is selling at the ritual in many covens. But the rate of 20,000 a year, accord- the whippings are done in a sym- ing to President Carl L. Wesch- bolic sense reminiscent of anc- cke, Llewellyn president. ient Christian practice to scorn the flesh, he said. "WITCHCRAFT is psychologi- Marcello Truzi, a sociologist at cal therapy for healthy people, New College in Sarasota who nas he said. spent eight years researching the Weschcke conceded it's also a occult, calls the Cochran slaying merchandiser's gold mine. "acid related occultism." In larger cities mail order hous- "Not even the ritual indicates anything long term or serious was involved" he said. "It appears nt of the occult char- to be a typical narcotics orient- rings as the work of, ed youth group." wierd tales on dime HEIM traces roots of modern ks picturing y o u n g American witchcraft to the hip- uts torn out by were- pie movement of the 1960s. Youth revolted against the es- tablishment, groping for some- es and numerous novelty shops do a booming trade in occult curios. IN NEW YORK, there's a witches' liberation movement, the Witches International Craft As- sociation known as WICA. Heim contends, however, that the blitz of sensual trappings and ominious demonic portrayals has attracted some people with maso- chistic tendencies and spawned half-baked spinoffs from a ser- ious, legitimate movement. thing positive, a philosophy to re- place disenchantment some turn- ed to Christianity. The J e s u s freaks evolved. Some probed deeper into Eastern religions. The progression eventually led to occultism - the belief in hid- den or mysterious powers sub- ject to human control. True covens rejected nar-:'scics as artificial stimulus. "[t de- feats the whole purpose of nagic which is to assert the power of the individual mind to use one's own will and mental Disciplines" Heim said. JACOBSON'S OPEN THURSDAY AND FRIDAY UNTIL 9:00 P.M. B time and tide wait for Miss J to appear in White Stag-Speedo waterclothes. . .her total look in swimwear and accessories is of fast drying, air-light wafts of nylon in a multi-color carnival print of black with splashes of pink/purple/yellow. A. Halter bikini, sizes 32-36, $16. B. Long sleeve pull-on pants, Shirt, $15. Pa C. Tie-shoulder in sizes S-M-L, shirt and sizes S-M-L: nts, $12. A r playdress $14. 4.~4 J4Of :r ff'' /i ' G :j: , 4 .v " C :../. y /' C Jacob~or'S LIBERTY AND MAYNARD