S. 4 .4 4 + ,fit -4 .fir * A- Cloud of Dust and a Hearty "Sieg Heil" PAPERBACK PLAYBAC Hell's Angels, by Hunter S. Thomp- son. Random House. $4.95. Modern Day Huns on high- powered motorcycles, they rape and pillage their way through Califor- nia. No better than animals, they have no regard for those sacred in- stitutions of showers and deodorant. These are only a few of the notions associated with the Hell's Angels.. Now at last someone has set us straight. Hunter S. Thompson's report, if it is not indeed biased in favor of so- ciety or the Angels, deserves an award for the best written account of one of the most feared twen- tieth-century o u t 1 a w gangs. As many as two hundred bikes on one run, a rolling zoo on wheels with beards dyed green, the ever-present colors of a winged death's head with "Hell's Angels" written above, the swastikas and oil-soaked levis, these are the "one-percenters," and they are every bit as real as the re- cord shows. The Hell's Angels have done al- most all-'of the feats attributed to them. The truth, however, has often been obscured by sensational press accounts and the cries of outraged citizenry. The Angels are not mis- guided youths who champion some rebel cause. For one thing, most of these "misguided youths" are in their twenties and a few are in their thirties. No, the Hell's Angels are genuine outlaws, outcasts from so- ciety: Their real motivation is a instine- tive certainty as to what the score really is. They are out of the ball- game and they know it... But in- stead of submitting quietly to their collective fate, they have made it 4the basis for a full-time social ven- detta. They don't expect to win any- thing, but on the other hand, they have nothing to lose. In a society dominated by the ma- chine and the skilled technician, the unskilled laborer is out in the cold. This has been the fate of most of the members of the club. Coming predominantly from the lower class, with fathers who were also unskill- ed laborers, these outcasts find a real sense of belonging in being an Angel. For them, there is no other way than their strange fraternal so- ciety with rituals and codes. One of the hardest things to un-. derstand about the Angels is their brutal beatings. But when you are against society and the Main Cop, everyone is a threat to your securi- ty. The Angels have a total retali- ation ethic and the club's motto is "All on One and One on All." No- body ever picks a fight with just one Angel. They are sheer muscle and guts, and if you are going to do anything you had better be able to take it. Pity and a hospital bill for the man who puts up a front and then can't muster enough support in the time it takes to break a beer bottle or unravel one of those chains the Angels wear for belts. One of the book's most interest- ing discussions shows the extent to Projection Booth (Continued from page one) as a weapon should be held, elated by the knowledge that you have gone some of the way towards the mastery of it." You shoot through the ceiling. Uncle Elia and Elf race up the stairs. "You aim at the open door... where you judge his heart, will be... He stands frames in the doorway... You pull the trigger." He is not dead; you grazed his left arm-pit. He and Elf scurry about, "trying to convince Childers that is was all a pre-arranged game, ending in an unforeseen accident.. . The sudden comedy of it takes you by surprise. You laugh until your throat aches. You wonder where you have been. But it no longer oc- curs to you to ask who you are. In some odd way, you seem to have in- vented yourself by your act." So addressed, the reader is pro- voked to a double response. Emo- tionally, he is involved with Bruno, and shares in his experience of suf- fering and growth. But at the same time, in a kind of self-defense, he withholds from complete identifica- tion with Bruno. This last is ex- tremely important, because it pre- vents the reader from being blind- folded by Bruno's limitations. Lack- ing integrity himself, Bruno cannot appreciate it in others. For him, his father, his mother, Childers, Jane and Uncle Elia are little more than separate collections of details clumped around a mysterious supe- riority that in the men threatens PICTURE CREDITS - Beita Lewis ..................Page 1 Sarah Burns .......... .Page 3 Bob Griess............Pages 6, 7 him, and in the women- promises protection. The reader, whenever other people appear, finds it natu- ral to depart from Bruno long enough to arrange the same details into much more meaningful person- alities. He can then make sense of their gestures toward one another - and Bruno; he sees what they mean to each other, and what Bruno, means to each of them. He partici- pates intellectually, understanding how Bruno's development is the product of these interrelationships,' which are chaos to Bruno. Dostoivsky, in the nineteenth century, wrote of men sucked into Chaos by their own overweening in- tellectualism. His success, as in Crime and Punishment, rested largely in his ability to preserve the involved reader's sympathy for such a character; and when this failed, as in parts of Notes from Under- ground, positive feeling vanished, and the reader now finds himself wading through dull and difficult wordiness. In the twentieth century Everett writes of a man drawn from chaos toward spontaneity and self-respect. His success with the involved read- er depends upon his ability to pre- vent complete sympathy; and when he fails, as in the opening of the first bedroom scene, intellectual ac- tivity vanishes, and the reader is plunged into pornography. These are brief moments, few and far be- tween, but they are costly, and for all but the most sophisticated read- ers will obscure much that is of real worth. Dostoevsky, along with many pro- found thinkers of his day and ours, sees a presumptuous modern civili- zation toppling over in the quake of unheeded natural forces. A symbol for this is St. Petersberg, built on a swamp at the expense of peasant lives, and full of rootless people. He felt that the reality of the irrational Man must bring to confusion all intellectual constructs. Peter Ever- ett tells another story. He reminds me of the movement in post- existentialist philosophy that calls for "a new optimism." The notions of chaos implicit in his novel-the collection of sense experiences and memory fragments, the dissolution of individuality ' into energy flux and of personality into relationship, the sexual function that Freud un- covered in every manifestation of human energy-and what he builds with, not against, or even upon. With them he builds a statement about integration of personality and spontaneous action, maturity and wisdom and control. Here in eii- bryo is a human construction that. just might stand up to the tribunal of irrational forces. Betty Arnholt Miss Arnholt is a second-year student majoring in English at Valpqraiso Uni- yersity. which the press has influenced the group. The author suggests that publicity has virtually made the Hell's Angels what they are today. The membership was dwindling - then came the widely publicized Monterey Rape of 1965. The Oak- land chapter swelled with refugees from other chapters, and every Genghis Khan on a motorcycle was out to show some class and wear the colors. In turning the heat on, the press gave them fame. Press interviews with m i c r o p h o n e s and camera equipment were common. We may deplore their actions, but there is something about bikes (their sound and power) and the open defiance of the Angels' actions that appeal to a strange element in all of us. We find their crime rate appalling, but by all means pour blood and gore on the tube, in novels, and (as long as it's far removed) in the newspa- pers. The Hell's Angels are not, then, just an isolated phenomenon. They won't go away with the passage of time, for other Angels will take their place. It's not really "them" that we should be afraid of, but the Rising Tide. And as Mr. Thompson carefully reminds us, "Far from being freaks, the Hell's Angels are a logical product of the culture that now claims to be shocked at their existence." Jay John Fox Mr. Fox is a third-year student major- ing in English at the Illinois Institute of Technology. The Midwest Literary Review Editors-in-chief: .Edward W. Hearne Bryan It. Dunlap Executive Editor: . David H. Richter Advertising Manager: Wayne Meyer Art Editor............ Bob Griess Michigan Editor ...... Liesa Mtros Illinois Institute of Technology Editor.....,...........Jay Fox Illinois Teacher's College Editor ................Pat Gleason Lake Forest Editor:..J. Greg Grde Loyola Editor:...........Bill Clohesy Minnesota Editor......Hans Knoep Northwestern Editor . red Eychaner New York Editor . Erik Sandburg -Diment Valparaiso Editor:. Janet Kanten Wooster Editor......Gary Housten Circulation Manager . Brian Corman Editorial Staff:.....Gretchen Wood Mary Sue. Leighton Ellen Williams Jeanne Safer The Midwest Literary Review, Circulation 7,0, Is publshed six times per academic year by The Chicago Literary Review. it is distrbute by the Michigan Daily, the Chicago Maroon, the Illinois Institute of Technology Technology Rew, the Illinois Teacher's College (South Camps) Tempo, the Lake Forest Stentr, the College of Wooster Voice, and the Valparalso Toch. Re- print rights have been granted to teNorth- western Daily, te Roosevet Torch, the Minne- sota Daily, and the Loyola News. Chief editorial offices: 122 East SMt Street, Chicgo, Illinois 6063. Phone: Ml 3-0W0, ext. 3265, 3266, 3269, 3270. Su i : $2.50 per year. Copyright 1967 by The Chicago Uterary Review. All Rights reserved.. Spring seems to have invigorated paperback publishers, for their newest releases include an inordi- nate number of intriguing and impressive volumes. The most exciting fiction to be re- printed recently is Penguin's new t r a n s 1 a t i o n of A.-J. Huysmans' Against Nature (A Rebours in French), which Oscar Wilde's Do- rian-Grey describes as the strangest book he ever read-an elegant, de- cadent, and distressingly contempo- rary novel. Penguin has initiated a new ser- ies of international poetry, prose and drama of the last fifteen years hitherto unavailable in English. Three of the volumes designed to combat cultural complacency are Writing Today in Africa, Italian Writing Today, and German Writ- ing Today. These provide a wel- come antidc.a to Leonard Cohen's repulsive and pretentious Beautiful Losers (Bantam). Bob Dylan by Daniel Kramer (Citadel) is an idolotrous photo- essay of smirks and grimaces. An illustrated anthology of Happenings by Michael Kirby presents scripts and production notes-curious, but doing little to elucidate the art form. The humor in Jules Feiffer's Marriage Manual (Random) is pain- fully personal, more cathartic than comic. Haiku master Matsuo Basho's an- guished and graceful Narrow Road to the Deep North and Other Travel Sketches (Penguin), in which he subtly fuses poetry, prose and philo- sophy, has been newly translated. Appearing in Penguin's Modern Eu- ropean Poets series is the taut and vivid verse of Czech poet-scientist Miroslav Holub. Harper Square Gal- er). Sir Richard Burton's fine old translation, with commentary, of the Kasidah of his friend and men- tor Haji Abdu El-Yezdi, has been reissued by Citadel. This existen- ...TE.......E.X..H A LITERAR EXCHANh WE ACCEPT CLASSIFIED ADVER- tisements for things desired or avail- able; personal services; literary. or publishing offers; miscellaneous items of interest to our readers. Rates for a single insertion: 15c per word, six insertions lc per word. Box $2:00 flat. Address Classified Department, Chicago Literary Review, 1212 E. 59th St., Ohicago, Illinois 60637. thors Registry, 527 Lexington Ave., N.Y., N.Y. 10017. FREE CATALOG. 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RANDOM HOUSE. General Book Department University of Chicago Bookstore 5802 ELLIS AVE. Chicago, Illi nois f MIDWEST LITERARY REVIEW 6 May, 1% May, 1967 0 MIDWEST L IT