Five Sunday, September Z9, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PageI Sunday, September 29,1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Paae Five .Zowie! Pow! It's TOM WOLFE!lioe 's By JEREMX JOAN HEWES The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test, by Tom Wolfe. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, $5.95. You Are There is Tom Wolfe's bag. Using a style of reporting that effectively drops the reader into the middle of whatever he is getting at Wolfe has recreated all types of situations and per- sonalities. This approach to writing is not a simple one; the writer must not only be able to see all of what goes on, but'also inust make his vision live again in words. Tom Wolfe has been successful at this task, and his popularity parallels that com- petence. The Electric Kool-Aid Acid (I Test is Wolfe's best work, and his style, called "parajournal- isms' by its critics, is excellent here. Ostensibly, this book is the story of Ken Kesey' (Author of, One Flew Over t h e Cuckoo's Nest) and his Merry Pranksters. But the particular persons and 9 their particular life'style are big enough to touch everything: the Pranksters' world is like one of those county fair swirl paintings in whic paint is dropped onto a piece of whirling glass-soon the colors run into and out of each other and the glass is completely covered. Instead of Just. paint, though, the Pranksters use~d Day-Gb, color film, tapes and intricate sound systems, an electric organ and drugs. The machine that makes their paint- ing possible is a test tube-LSD -and the setting is no ordinary county fair. The setting is in fact, Now: the neon, Day-Glo, electro-acid, speed grass, out-front American scene. Time and time again Wolfe points out that this ex- perience, the Prankster trip, is American. However weird, ugly, blasphemous or dangerous the experience of these people they saw their collective life ;as an allegory of America and, more important, they have been re- sponsible for much of what Now America has become. Ken Kesey's contribution to Now America had subtle and ev- en accidental beginnings. Kes- ey went to Stanford in 1958 to study creative writing; he and his wife Faye were soon adopted by an arty group who fancied their 0O r e g o n back-country charm. A member of this group suggested that Kesey make ex- tra money by volunteering for "psychomimeti,, drug exper- neprts being conducted t a nearby hospital. One dayKesey was given LSD, and sudd nly he cQuld see into the doctor who came to question him. Kesey noticed that the man's lower lip 0 trembled slightly and some- how he understood - he could. "See each muscle fiber de- cussate, pulling the poor jelly of his lip to the left and the fibers one. by one leading back into infrared caverns of t h e body, through transistor-radio innards of nerve tangles, each one on Red Alert, the poor nin- ny's hooks desperately trying to make the little bastards keep still in there, I am Doctor, this is laiman specimen before me." By early 1960, two years be- fore Timothy Leary and Richard * Alpert passed the drug to Har- vard frosh, Kesey and, his friends were conducting their own experiments with LSD, mescaline, IT-290 (a supera- mphetamine) and peyote (which they bought mail order from Laredo, Texas). Kesey also began working as an assistant in a psychiatric ward, where he found charac- ters and setting for One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest. Cer- tain parts of the novel w e r e written while Kesey was on LSD or peyote; the door had been opened and the whole mind had produced. The whole mind's efforts did not go unnoticed. When t h e Keseys moved into a log house in the middle of a redwood for- est, beautiful people started turning up and were made wel- come. By 1964, the beautiful life was in full swing and the four- year Prankster trip had begun. Some of, everything happened, too much to tell, but the first big adventure was the Bus. Kes- ey, labeled the Intrepid Trav- eler, bought a 1939 school bus that had been converted to a supercamperhby some fellow with kids. The Bus was the ve- hicle for a gigantic Prankster allegory of life,.and since this trip across America was to be the ultimate, the Bus had to be fitted ultimately. It was: acid-inspired Day-G1o artncovered the Board ofEduca- tion yellow body; a system of cameras, tape decks, speakers, earphones and mikes with vari- able-lag echo that would rival Universal City covered the in- side; various receptacles stored marijuna, dexedrine and other amphetamines, and the refrige- rator brimmed with electric kool-aid - orange juice 'laced with LSD. From the start, the Pranksters were high on something - though orange juice was ra- tioned so that the supply would last to New York and back - and the freaking glory of this whole thing created a g r o up mind immeditely. Two things in particular are possible to a per- son who has experienced LSD; he knows what everyone else is thinking through, say, vibra- tions, and later he also knows, by sensing or glinpsing t h e cosmic spirit that directs the universe. Sp 15 heads (12 men, three women) headed east, pioneering backward through America in a Day-Glo conestoga, armed with electronic implements, a c i d hardtack and a great' open Prankster'- mind. Wolfe says their allegory had an altruis- tic purpose: "There was going to be a ho- ly terror in the land. But there would also be people who would look up rout of their poor work- a-day lives in some town, some old guy, somebody's stenograph- er, and see this bus and register . ..delight, or just pure open invitation'Wonder. Either way, the Pranksters figured there was hope for these people." And: the Pranksters intended to prove it - in 40-odd hours of film, in -acid-zonked unbelieve- able shows at gas stations and rest areas, in dazzling decora- tions such as the special sign for Phoenix' (it was '64), "A Vote for Barry is a Vote for Fun." Kesey was the acknowledged leader of the group, less because he financed the trip than be- cause he emitted a kinetic en- ergy and a few soft-spoken cryp- tic messages for the collective mind. Two . ground rules were agreed upon - that every Prankster let every other person "do his thing," whatever it was, and that everything be k e p t "out front," fear anger, bumm- ers (bad trips), everything. Kes- ey didn't dictate t h e s e rules; rather he ended the discussion, by declaring, "You're either on the bus or off the bus." Indeed, staying on t h e bus was difficult, but speed, grass and acid made it possible and pranks and games made it tol- erable. The most constant ex- ercise was "rapping" - each segment of the group mind speaking, picking up on what another person said or on vi-e brations or on anything. Neal Cassady (Dean Moriarity in Kerouac's (On the Road)' rap- ped incessantly as he drove - "there's a barber going down the highway cutting his hair at 500 miles an hour, you under- stand." And someone else con- tinued - "and there's a Cadillac with Marie Antoinette" - and so on. So the acid-rapping Prank- sters were "synched in," as Wolfe says, and it was on the Bus that they reached the Un- spoken Thing. No one put it into words, aloud anyway, but the heads h a d discovered it. Kesey wrote, "we're under cos- mic control and have been for r a long long time and each time it builds, it's bigger, and it's stronger. And then you find out . about Cosmo, and you dis- cover that he's running the show." The Bus returned to Kesey's home in late summer, but the Pranksters stayed on the bus and many more people boarded even though it was :parked. But Kesey realized that Cosmo, vi- brations, and beauty should be carried to vast numbers of peo- ple - all of America should be on the Bus if willing. So the Pranksters promoted numerous "acid tests," again from gen- erous motives. By this time Le- ary and Albert had established the League for Spiritual Discov- ery, and 'beautiful people flock- ed to the poles of Leary's ill- brook, New Y o rk, estate and Kesey's California territory. Of course Kesey was not the only purveyor of LSD, but he and the Pranksters introduced the Hell's Angels to a c i d' among others, and t h e y started the whole phenomenon of acid rock, light shows, mixed media freak- outs at the acid tests. Where were the police, federal narcotics' agents and other au- thorities during all of this? They were on the scene, to be sure, but LSD was not outlawed in California until October, 1966. Oh, there were a few raids - Kesey was busted twice for pos- session of marijuana, and he later engineered a suicide prank (it flopped) and fled to Mexico. Meanwhile, Ken Babbs, tempo-, rary leader of the Pranksters during Kesey's flight, added a daring dimension to an acid test in Watts; he announced that two bowls of kool-aid were be- ing served, "one for little folk and one for big f o 1 k." Thus many people took LSD suspect- ing it - either they had thought the admonition meant alcohol or they hadn't heard the an- nouncement. The police dropped in at this r e a 1 freak-out, of course, but they didn't stay. The peace. officers wouldn't have known what to do with these crazies, more and weirder than usual this time. Wolfe's chapter on the Watts acid test, for which his book is titled, is singularly appropriate. He includesna lengthy account of the experience by a girl who had never even been high; her words grip and enchant: "I stood under t h e 'black' light and drops of paint fell on my foot and sandal, and it was exquisite . . . it was peaceful' and beautiful ,beyond descript- ion. My skin had depth and tex- ture under the light . . . a vel- vety purple. I remember wishing it could be that color always. (I still do.)" Wolfe likewise depicts a girl on a bummer - wailing, "wrest- ling with God," screaming an agonized "Who cares?" One critic has chastised Wolfe for not editorializing about the Watts test or about drugs, freak- ed brains, nameless babies, and the like. The point is, T o m Wolfe relates it exactly as it happened. Not all the details of Prankster life were beautiful, and the author has not pulled punches; he tells, for example, how one girl "completed h e r trip" in Houston, about ten days out on the Bus. "Stark naked," had done her thing. She roared off into the void, and was pick- ed up by the cops and by, and the doors closed in the County psychiatric ward, and that was that, for the Pranksters were long gone.' There were other casualties, permanent and tem- porary, and Wolfe spares no de- tails of them. If Wolfe had preached or drawn conclusions rather than letting every moment become its own testimony, he could nev- er have taken us on the Now trip. To learn, Wolfe realizes, we must not be told - we must experience life. A b o u t a year ago, Wolfe spoke of his style of writing, asserting that "moral- ism and political convictions stand in the way of truth." The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test proves him right: because we live it, or at least s e e it, we judge the truth that is right for us. This b o o k is a superlative achievement for many reasons. First, Wolfe has dared to re- create a here and now t h a t could only be timidly approach- ed by most people. The exper- ience of The Electric Kocl-Aid Acid Test, if he had given ins- tructions, would go something like this: you would be told to hold your breath and let your heartbeat grow until it swells and swirls around y o u, still running the blood through your temples - ha, temples - and then tip-toe up (somehow it's always up) toward, further on toward - Edge City. It's as if Wolfe takes the portion of your heartbeat that is outside you and deposits it further up the trail. So part of you has been to Edge City, and the door is may- be creaking in your hand. And Wolfe has shown you, too, the Now America cult, some there- is-a-bigger-than-life c o s m i c force, that your life is perhaps a cell of a fingernail of a fin- ger of a giant being. He has likened the Prankster trip to what the prophets of science and religion and literature have revealed through the ages. How closely the Prankster experience parallels Hesse's Journey to the East; how similar Kesey's and Weber's descriptions of Cosmo. And, miraculously, all of this is done in words. Words bor- rowed f r o m Pranksters' notes and letters; paradoxical non- sense words; words making col- ors and vibrations; words rap- ping and propping doors open. Finally, why this cult, why this trip, why this epic? Wolfe has the answer, though his doc- ument is more than sufficient self-justification. In an ex- planatory note about The Elec- tric Kool-Aid Acid T e s t, the writer states that his main fear for America is the burgeoning affluence of our society and the leisure that the future prom - 'ises. Whatever the acid genera- t i o n is reacting to, whatever prompts this risky experimenta- tion, Wolfe sees that mind and consciousness must expand in some rough proportion to the decreasing demands of mental and physical work. This is not to say that the book is Wolfe's blueprint for the future, or even for n o w. Rather, the now of it is that these kids (t h e y are mostly kids) see their parents living straight out of, say, O'Hara or Updike, hurrying through inane, empty leisure. This emptiness can only increase, they reason, so the young seek to fill this vacuum by tapping the resourc- es of their minds, using ingenu- ity, creativity and sensibility to fill the void they feel around them. As for the future, nobody dares predict. However it is done, some persons will continue to discover Cosmo, and Wolfe has reinforced our h o p e for the realization- But he has not tak- en us into o u r future: Tom Wolfe has simply shown how some few people took an Ameri- can county fair trip and encoun- tered an ultimate. igain! 1: >. r,, {. ,. > Dksbooksbooksbooks bools Ken iston looks at the other side of us By DAVID KNOKE Young Radicals: Notes on Committed Youth, by Kenneth Keniston. Harcourt, Brace & World, $5.95. Kenneth Keniston's first book, The Uncommitted (published last year, is already appearing_ on most reading lists for intro- ductory psychology courses. -His reputation as an observer of the youth scene and his popularity. among those who;are his sub- jects is going to be further en- hanced by his second book, Young Radicals. The topic of his first effort was the disaffected college stu- dent who expressed his aliena- tion from American social life by withdrawal and privatism. In Young Radicals, he turns his at- tention to a different form of alienation. He spent an entire summer interviewing 14 young people-11 males and 3 women -who organized and ran the 1967 Vietnam Summer project. The project, a nationwide at- tempt to build up opposition to the war- among predominantly middle-class citizens, gave Ken- iston the chance to watch the articulation of political aliena- tion in positive actions. He uses the method of "col- lective biography" in tracing back to childhood the roots of the young radicals' commitment to work for social change. Through skillful use of tape- recorded quotations and his own. interpolations, he creates a de velopmental theory of radical- ization. Keniston himself is a psychol- ogist, but he goes beyond his field to fuse sociological, politi- cal and historical thought. "As with all events studied as they naturally occur, the ongoing h: - tory of the New Left cannot be explained with concepts and theories of any one discipline," he warns. The young radicals' lives are set off from those of their more conventional peers by the occur- ance of not one but two crises, during adolescence. Most teen- agers handle the problems of puberty by, submerging them- selves in the alternative subcul- ture of their peers by' denying their urges and restricting indi- viduality. The radicals, however, in the main, come well-equipped by their families with core values to cope with adolescent crises of sexuality and 'breaking family bonds. But no sooner is this first crisis resolved than a pre-ado- lescent pattern of success is adopted. If people iof these back- grounds subsequently have "the growing awareness that their lives are inadequate," such ali- enation may be coped with by covert or overt opposition to Es- tablished institutional life. Keniston attempts to put this psychological process into his- torical perspective. He sees the emergence of a stage between adolescence and adulthood-the' stage of youth-where a mora- torium on success-striving has been declared. Spawned of post- war affluence, ambivalent in the face of a technology of death, the youth are still in the process of defining themselves. - In the brief year since Viet- nam Summer ended, the efforts of the politically alienated to create new institutions have run violently afoul of the nation's elite. The Pentagon march, Co- lumbia, Telegraph Ave., Chicago Hilton-these are only the sym- bols of an increasingly violent conflict being generated out of new historical forces that are abraiding and corroding each other. Keniston's methods may not please the more traditionalist among social science research- ers. He is more intuitive than empirical. Often the things he says and conclusions he draws appear so patently obvious that on first blush they are superfi- cial commentaries. Yet his approach to these dis- turbing events shows a real ef- fort at new understanding. No vocabulary, no set of concepts, no theoretical relations yet exist for the phenomena he describes. He cannot afford yet to be so- phisticated on virgin territory, for fear a complex analysis will obscure the fundamental impor- tance oflhis subject. Keniston literally presents us with his notes and states his opinions. But we are free, or ra- ther, compelled to make our own Judgments.. ' By Anato Judg coin. Juv cerne what comes area book esting wheth work ever f Rat lysisc facto the Home 1967 tingen As he reader of th Wayn is in Home. Poor jude-ment Y STEVE WILDSTROM the precinct lockup? Lincoln's apparent obsession with snipers, my of a Riot: A Detroit which permeates the book, e's Report, by James Lin- strains the credulity of the McGraw-Hill, $5.95. reader. Lincoln concedes that the De- enile court officials con- troit riot was not started by so- d with the problem of called "professional agitators," to do until the judge but, despite the extensive find- when a riot-strikes their ings to the contrary by the Ker- may find Judge Lincoln's ner Commission, he can com- informative, if not inter- fortably say: "A few profession- It is doubtful, however, al agitators moved in and took er this deceptively-titled advantage of a riot situation holds any appeal what- and played a very considerable for anyone else. part in enlarging the original riot area. They also played a her than being an ana- part in spreading it throughout f a riot, the book is in other areas of Detroit." Lincoln, a detailed description of of course, does not know who Wayne County Juvenile these "professional agitators" s operations during the were, nor can he explain the Detroit riot and its con- basis for his remarkable con- icy plans for the next riot. clusion. never tires of telling his In the last analysis, the book s, Judge Lincoln as judge proves oily 'one thing: With ie juvenile division of Judge Lincoln presiding, juve- e County Probate oCurt, nile justice in Wayne County, if charge of the Juvenile not-blind, is severely myopic. vTHJE CIRCLE Zen, Yoga, Tarot Alchemy, Astrology, Theosophy Tarot, Magic Parapasychology 215 S. STATE .. 2nd Floor U -::f) 7O :"?t)!-:::32'. ,.-'i E -:::t) " Y t>L:-yr[-:yo U t>- 0...but a bit much, folks Lincoln's book might -have been useful for juvenile court officials were its credibility not seriously strained by a number of asides slipped in by, the good judge. For example, he writes: "In one precinct in Detroit, hundreds of prisoners were locked up for several days. The white and colored snipers group- ed together in friendly fashion." Surely, one must expect a judge to have more regard for fact than that. More than a year after the Detroit riot, no one has come to trial for sniping. To he best of my knowledge, no one was ever formally charged with sniping and there certain ly were no more than one or two arrests on the charge. How, then, did "white and colored snipers" form friendly groups in Today's writers ... JEREMY JOAN HEWES is a graduate student in the Amer- ican Culture program and is, to be sure, a fan of Tom Wolfe. DANIEL' OKRENT, feature editor of The Daily, edits-and occasionally writes for-The Sunday Book Page. Daily executive editor DAVID KNOKE is a senior in the lit erary college majoring in psy- chology and sociology. ' As an Associated Press re- porter in Detroit two summers ago, Daily managing editor STEVE WILDSTROM observed the '67 riots 'firsthand aspart of the newsteam that covered the riots for the AP. By DANIEL OKRENT 4 The Pump House Gang, by Tom Wolfe. Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, $5.95. One of the' virtues-oh, praise be!-of Tom Wolfe - rattattatta -articles is their SPECIAL insights, which consist primarily-yes-of their unique presentation. Wolfe dissects-slice, knife, cut, aaaaaaah-cultural carcasses with a perfect temper and great perceptual selection. You can pick up a copy of New York, thumb through it 'til you see his name, and immerse yourself in the hot rodders or the society boys or the fakey political types. He won't record birthdate, height, weight, quotes. He'll jump into the character, turn him inside out, tell him what he's doing and 4 why. His Richard Lester- approach to non-fiction' in print can exhilirate, reaXll But there's a point where it gets you down. There's only so much you can take. Tom Wolfe can pour all his images into too big a bucket, and they will swirl together and his very special insights become blurred in the stew. Specific flavors will get crushed in the over spicing. Mag- azine pieces are for magazines; eat them one at- a time. And so, The Pump House Gang won't really make it. There is, simply, too much Wolfe at once. The same might have been the case with far superior to what it was in his earlier work, but it has also developed so much that taken all at once it becomes cloying: But Mr. Wolfe must be given credit for the perfection that caused his downfall. That is, his journalistic advances since Streamlined Baby have been so great that his best in this selection far outshines his previous high. Two essays in particular mark the recent Wolfe as a new Journalist so on top of things that his words become part of the scene he is viewing. The title story-a puzzled, frightened, hesitant investigation of the Southern California beach set-is superb. Equally praiseworthy is a Hugh Hefner piece - Hugh Hefner pieces are now standard for- collections of cultural criticism - that defines the super-Playboy in new, surprising- ly perceptive terms: as a cultural dropout, a pro- duct of current social phenomena that turn the man inward to such a degree that his self-appre- ciation is no longer predicted on how others appraise him. In fact, if they don't regard him at all, Hefner is doing his best. Why does he need you and me to tell him he's great when he trusts himself as a better judge? But, on the whole, it is a good thing that Farrar, Straus, and Giroux, the publisher, decided to release The Pump House Gang simultaneously with The Electric Cool-Aid Ocid Test. The cri- o- I 1j !II Featuring Another ROD McKUEN Bestseller LONESOME CITIES Available at Ulrich's evio -nu i YI II I