THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 8, 1968 THE ICHIAN DILY uesay. ctobr_&_..6 lectures r I - Seriously, friends, I WHAT ? YOU'VE ONLY SEEN "THE GRADUATE" ONCE?? 0 is 7 By DAVID SPURR It's a little difficult to tell whether or not Timothy Leary is for real. Until you get used to listening to him, you keep y ~ expecting him to disappear into a cloud of psychedelic smoke, or something. If he were smaller, he could be an acid-head lepre- chaun. Sunday night he traipsed out onto the stage of Hill Aud. in bell bottoms, long gray hair and beads and, with his soft, stoned- out voice, proceeded to paint a fantasy land of the future where " ..everyone is turned on for keeps. "I have a confession to make," said the former Harvard profes- sor, "I'm actually not a human -. 4being of the twentieth century; ~; what I am is a space traveler from the year 2020. And I'm on ^.amission something like a forest ranger's. (Laughter.) They sent me down here becadse they're really amazed at what's happen- ing. There hasn't been a screw- up like this since Atlantis went down." (More laughter, clap, clap clap.) And so, as he described how groovy it is up there in the land of no hang-ups, it became ap- parent that Leary was really Daily-Andy sack's preaching a sermon against the evils of our land-grabbing, Does the man from the year 2020. . money-grubbing, hung-up so- ciety down here in 1968. Oh, Boston you're my home 1-T* imothy It was all part of a "debate," presumably concerning the use of hallucinogenic drugs, w i t h Dr. Sidney Cohen, a Los AnL geles medical researcher. Leary's basic message w a s direct enough: Tune in, turn on and drop out, but do it for God. In fact, Leary ended up giving 21 reasons why you shouldn't take LSD, because you're not holy enough." Our own society, he explain- ed, is hung-up because we don't understand certain things, like Black Magic, f'rinstance. "You don't know about Black Magic . . about the people who have made compacts with the devil." Or diets. "You are what you eat, you know." Most of Leary's points were ' not so inane, however, and some valid criticisms of the mentality of the western mind surfaced. "You don't know who you are. You don't know all the insane maniacs inside your personal- ity." Leary for real? ACADEMY AWARD WINNER 4 it is . . . Eight kids died of suf- focation because they tried freon spray." Etcetera. And a few good quotes: "We can define LSD in terms of ex- panded gullibility." Or the one about the scientist who tripped out and found the eternal truth on the bathroom wall: "Flush After Using." Perhaps the real core of the debate centered on something which neither man really dwell- ed upon - what Cohen called "the context of social respon- sibility" - the idea that no social system has complete in- dividual freedom. In other words, if everybody's stoned out, who's going to take out the garbage? One other thing, too. Cohen said, "My objection is to the head, the person who has made a chemical the center of his life existence. Shall we come creep- ing for our euphorias, our soma pills a la Brave New World? There will never be a wisdom pill. Don't wait for it." BEST DItECTOR-Mmr. NtiihvLS JOSEPH E. LEVINE MRC N CACA MIKE NICHOLS- LAWRENCE TURMANjpaouc This is Benjamin, He's a little worried about his future. 1 ... have anything to say at all AN AVC0EMBASSYLM MONDAY thru THURSDAY-7:00 & 9:00 Lw!OM- m i % 3 Leary ended his presentation by telling us "in a roundabout way" that we're God. And we alone can decide the course of our lives. "It's possible to make (life) a run for glory. There's no rea- son why everyone can't be ston- ed out-all the time. (Wild ap- plause)'." And on the other hand we had Dr. Sidney Cohen, looking like he had come straight from the lab, in his shirtsleeves, giv- ing a fatherly talk about "what's really going on down here." We got from Dr. Cohen a series of down-to-earthisms about the drug users. "Of t e n people put things in their mouth and they don't even know what DELTA PHI EPSI .ON S By LITTLE SUZY FUNN Kazooist Extraordinaire Almost everybody who wasn't in Boston came to rock by one of three major routes: 1) they got into the folk scene and moved back with Dylan, and that set; 2) they got int the folk scene and moved into the blues scene and came back with Butterfield and that set; 3) they never left U, S. Bonds be- hind no matter how many peo- ple spat on them. But people in Boston did it differently. They got into the very, very hip and arcane Bos- ton folk scene and moved into the ultra-intelligentsia-orient- ed Boston-Cambridge laugh- folk music and cne into their own with the Spoonful and the Mamas and the Papas and things like that. Cambridge is such a hip city that it's nauseating to, spend too much time there. Every one of the two billion students who live there is aware-and they all form into tight little cliques, and they talk to each other in aa kind of hip shorthand of ges- tures and phrases and it all seems pretty warped when you start to get into it. d But back in the good old days when it wasn't so bad, every- body got together at the coffee- houses-the Odyssey,maybe, or more likely the Club 47-and they'd all listen to the Boston music ahd laugh together at the sly, hip in-jokes. Everyone grooved to Jon. Hammond, or John Fahey, or whoever, was in town, but most of all they would groove to their own thing-and their own thing was John Kweskin and the Jug Band, who came from B.U. to make the people feel good, If anyone doesn't know by now, Kweskin was the big push- er of good-time music (almost half of the cuts on the first Spoonful album are direct steals -arrangements and all- from Kweskin's Jug Band). The quality of his music is just that: good times. It's infectious, and even if you're not with all thep intellectual side action, you've sorta gotta smile a little and tapyour foot when you hear him do it"- Kweskin has one of the all- time classic voices - one that should be felt and not heard. It has a rasping hoarseness sort of GO GO BAHAMAS 8 FABULOUS DAYS 7 GLORIOUS NIGHTS $17900 Dec.27th-Jan. 3rd INCLUDES: * Round trip jet air fare * 7 Nights accommoda- tions a't he famous Freeport Inn, * 7 Great happy hours like Dylan's but this is added to a rhythmic quality like you've never heard before. He plays his voice-box like 'a tambourine, syncopating his way through d r u m pieces Ginger Baker couldn't do if he was stoned. It gives everything to the per- formance. Kweskin is the only man I know who can make you listen to the songs in his reper- toire (songs like "Mississippi Mud" and "Ain't She Sweet") without making you feel like you're condescending in your mind. He's always surprising you, switching the rhythm or the lyrics in an appealing way (especially like when he does "Bo-beedle-a-Bamba.") So where was I anyway? Oh, yeah, everybody in Cambridge got together with their thing in the Club 47 long, long ago. And then Vanguard got wind of Kweskin and he and the Jug Band cut a few albums and started going around the coun- try, and then the Jug Band broke up for a while and he cut one alone and they got back to- gether and the Cambridge peo- ple wandered away to L.A. or Ann Arbor or wherever and it all got sort of lost in the past-- mixed up in your mind with the Spoonful and John Fahey and, Barry and the Remains. Well, Kweskin just put out an album to bring it back, or at least to remind you where it was, is, and always shall be at. Appropriately e n t it le l What Ever Happened to the Good Old Days at Club 47 in Cambridge Massachusetts with Jim Kwes- kin and His Friends, it makes good sounds when you play it and that's nice, too. If you were there at the time and you know what it was like, you know enough to hear this. If you weren't, maybe ' you should pick it up and it could give you some insight into an- other way down the garden path. And, oh yeah, Fritz Richmond plays the jug on the album too, but that's another story. .. ltie C~eamn SOROR1TY presents FREE FUR COAT as DOOR PRIZE No Admission Charge -Daily-Andy Sacks Phone 434-0130 w E ar CARPENTER iDA OPEN 7:00 P.M. 2o0 ur. coming SLATURDAY, OCT - r12 8 P.M. at OLYMPIA STADIUM-mDetroit A showing by the New York Fur Dressers of the latest furs as presented in MADEMOISELLE Featuring the "PRIME MOVERS" OCT. 8 - 7:30 P.M. LEAGUE BALLROOM TICKETS: $6, $5, $4 , =-- U of M SKI CLUB SECOND I SHOWS AT 1F:r-3:00-5:00 7:10-9:10 (FeaturelO0 :min, later) The 'Paper Lion' is about to getcreamed!, Stuart Mllar presents ~'.Technicolor United Artists NO 2-6264 L HELGA I AND .. SHUTTERED. FROM WAES.SEVEN S ICM OR t I ON SALE at Olympia, Grinnell's and all major J. L. Hudson Co. stores MAIL ORDERS: send check or money order and self-addressed envelope to Olympia Stadium, 5920 Grand River, Detroit, 48208 UNION-LEAGUE and The Interational i SWITZERLAND MEETING Center -= Still some places left on this really inexpensive ($280) trip. All people who are going or want to go should attend. Vital information will be dispensed..1 TUES., OCT. 8, 7:30 P.M. UNION BALLROOM STUDY, TRAVEL, WORK ABROAD Are you interested in programs offered to study, travel, or work abroad for the summer or academic year? If so, the time to start planning is NOW. The International Center receives information on many such opportunities annually and has set up informational meetings to distribute the iriforma- tion and answer questions. RECREATION ROOM of the INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison (in the South Wing of the Michigan Union) i FLICS TON ITE BATTLE OF CULLODON Directed by Peter Watkins who is' hpppily respon- sible for How I Won The War with Beatle John Lennon; an anti-war film using semi-documentary techniques. By directors of Liquid Jazz, brusque brilliant satire, a racy scathe of nicartonia. TONITE 7:30 P.M. and 9:30 P.M. Canterbury House 50c admission 14ArIONAL GENERAL. CORtPORATION LS OA FOXEASTERNEATRESN LASTTIMES TODAY FOX VILLa5 'How to Save a Marriage" 375 NO.MAPLE RD. 769 300T7:10-9:10 *STARTS TOMOR ROW* Mon.-Fri.-7:30-9:20 Sat.-Sun.-2:00-3:50-5:40-7:30-9:20 Whenyou talk about 'The Swimmer'villyou talk about yourself? COLUMBIA PICTURES and HORIZON PICTURES Present Mon., Oct. 71,Tues., Oct. 0 9 3 A.M. P.M. P.M. 3 P.M. Wied., Oct. 9 10 A.M. 2 P.M. 4 P.M. Thur., Oct. 101 Fri., Oct.' 11 9 A.M. 10 A.M. 1 PKM 9 3 A.M. P.M. P.M. cc Etcrc A MC 5 eABRAtion 4 )-Recording Artists and the Stooges 4 Y at the 5D t Huron at Ashley A m I