The Michigan Daily-Saturday, November 18,1978-Page 3 A fYuSE E, *ASPPEN1 CALL 7:-AY Correction In yesterday's article about the annual meeting between the University Regents and the Senate Advisory Committee on University Affairs (SACUA) Thomas Roach was misquoted. The article says Roach "agreed that 'We can give up on the legislature' to stop the faculty salary erosion, but added that the faculty 'won't get ready support from this board for a ten per cent salary increase'." Roach' actually insisted that "We cannot give up on the legislature" to stop the support of higher education, but added that the faculty "won't get ready support from this board for a ten per cent tuition increase." Our sincere apologies for this error. They won't gobble this gobbler Some vegetarians around campus will be holding an early "turkey lunch" Tuesday in honor of Thanksgiving. But they won't be eating the gobbler, they'll be sharing their lunch with him. "The purposeof the lunch," said Vegetarian Society spokesman Gul Agha, "is to acquaint people with turkeys as living, satient beings. We hope that this will help people empathize with the animals upon whom incredible suffering is being inflicted." Students in the Vegetarian Society will be feeding the turkey, passing out alternative Thanksgiving recipes, and answering questions on animal rights and nutrition from 11-1 Tuesday on the Diag. The turkey will then be donated to a farm and given shelter. We're sure he'll give his thanks for that. Take ten A teachers' union voted on Nov. 18, 1968 to end what was the worst educationaltie-up in the nation's history. The bitter citywide strike had kept most of New York's 1.1 million public school children out of classes for seven weeks. Also on that day, the A&P store on Huron Street announced it would not sell California grapes as long as the United Farm Workers continued its boycott against California grapes. Happenings Cinema Guild - Pink Flamingoes, 7, 8:30, 10 p.m., Old Arch. Aud. Ann Arbor Film Co-op - The Serpent's Egg, 7, 9 p.m., Aud. 3, MLB. Cinema II - The Duellists, 7, 9p.m., Aud. A Angell. Mediatrics - Hitchcock night, Suspicion, 7, 10:20 p.m., Murder, 8:40 p.m., Nat. Sci. Aud. East Quad Midnight Cinema - The Last Picture Show, midnight, Residential College Aud. PERFORMANCES Music School - Mozart's "Marriage of Figaro," 8 p.m., Mendelssohn. Men's Glee Club - lVtichigan and Purdue Men's Glee Clubs, 8 p.m., Hill Aud. PTP - Fugard's "People Are Living Here," 8 p.m., Trueblood, Frieze. Celebrants - "Godspell," 8p.m., Holy Trinity Chapel, Ypsilanti. MEETINGS Go Club -2 p.m., 2050 Frieze. MISCELLANEOUS International Center - trip to Eastern Market, Detroit. Sign up for transportation, Room 18, International Center, leaves 9 p.m., International Center. Arbor Alliance - Program on nuclear powe, noon, First Presbyterian Church, Monroe, Michigan. Eclipse - Ann Arbor Jazz Workshop, beginners' session, 3:30 . p.m., Anderson Room D, Union. Apn Arbor Country Dance Orchestra - New England Contra Dance, 8 p.m., St. Andrew's Church. Union Programming - Prohibition Party, 9:00 p.m., Union ballroom. Left in the dark? Some of the University's libraries save energy by keeping lights in the stacks turned off while the area aren't in use. Apparently the folks at Washington University in St. Louis thought that was a good idea, too. But the Chronicle of Higher Education reports that Wash U has added an additional twist to its energy saving plan. Library patrons must still slip the switch on for lighting, but the lights shut off automatically after 20 minutes. This and other efforts have netted Wash U savings of $75,000 annually in the'library alone. The gains seem impressive, but what we and the Chronicle want to know is how many students they've lost in the stacks. 0 Last chapter for alternative bookstore? By TOM MIRGA A Periodical Retreat, Ann Arbor's alternative bookstore, stands a good chance of folding up shop if business. doesn't pick up woon, owners Sam and Kay DeJong Mahaffey said. "The crisis now," Mahaffey said "is that someone has always worked 'somewhere else to keep the store afloat, and that isn't the case now." THE SHOP ALSO suffers from a lack of customers, due in a large part to its location at 336% State Street, a second story spot above Music Mart that's a short 30 feet away from the main flow of business. "If enough people find out about us, we know the business can survive," Ms. Mahaffey claimed. "We've put out a lot of ads in the papers, handed out materials door-to-door and tried to pass the news by word of mouth. We have also tried to make a lot of personal con- tacts." "Business is picking up," Sam Mahaffey said, "but if things don't start getting better, we just can't stay on. Our funds are drying up fast. The trend looks good, but things are awful hard now." THE MAHAFFEYS feel the loss of their business would also be a loss for the Ann Arbor community in general. "Most of our materials aren't han- dled by the large distributors, so we have to go direct to the publishers," Ms. Mahaffey said. "The expense of getting these periodicals and books are helping to put us under." The owners had never planned A Periodical Retreat as a money-making operation, being content to pay off the debts and other incurred costs. They also depend a great deal on volunteer help to keep the shop afloat. The selection of the materials in the shop is diverse, ranging from journals on alternative energy, poetry, radical politics and cookbooks to items like posters, calendars and games. "MOST BOOKSTORES deal with one or two distributors, and what the stores THlE MIllI(;;1NlDAILY Volume I.XXXIX. No.63 Saturday. November I, i97 is edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan. News phone 7640562. Second class postage is paid at Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Published daily Tuesday through Sunday morning during the University year at 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109. Subscription rates: $12 September through April (2 semesters): $13 by mail, outside Ann Arbor. Summer session published Tuesday through Saturday morning. Subscription rates: $6.50 in Ann Arbor: $7,00 by mail outside Ann Arbor. carry is basically a matter of what the distributor carries," Mahaffey said. "The basic way we go about getting our materials is first to determine what the people want and need. Then we deter- mine what the best journals are to carry. Finally, we write directly to the publisher and set up the arrangements to get the materials." The Mahaffeys also carry a large number of back issues of the journals, they carry, unlike most of the other bookstores in town. "In many ways, we're almost like a library without the funding," said Mahaffey. "Right now, everything depends upon how many people find out about us," Mahaffey said. He added that if con- ditions don't improve within the next month, a meeting with the store's staff and customers will be held to determine A Periodical Retreat's future. "There are a lot of materials that should be offered to the public that aren't because they aren't economical," Mahaffey said. "We think that isn't a good enough reason not to. And we are willing to do anything we can to keep the shop open." Thanksghiin Weekend Special BILLIARDS at reduced rates and M-PIN BALLING Open 1 p.m. Thurs.-Sun. atithe U NION 'I' Paid Advertisement On a Theory Concerning the Human Sexual Function "I bel'eve you have truly rendered Reich's ideas about the energy functions of the orgasm."- Alexander Lowen, M.D., Executive Director, The Institute for Bioenergetic Analysis. by Robert W. Milnes A The following account is based on the work of Dr. Wilhelm Reich. It is written with the assumption that the reader is familiar with that work. If not, a suggested initial reading list would include The Sexual Revolution, The Discovery of the Orgone, and Character Analysis, all by Reich. Briefly, Reich adhered to Freud's postulation of libido and the sexual etiology of nAurosis. He answered the question, "How does libido function?" with the tension-charge formula after much clinical experience. He later discovered the orgonomic sexual functions through experimentation and research. However, he failed to correlate them as I have done Figure 1-1. This is understandable because Reich was essentially a pioneer in this field and had many pressures on him. It is now possible to understand libidio (or orgonomic) function as simply the alternation between T.C. formula with respect to divergence (life process) e.g. growth, perception, experience, exploration, creativity etc. and the T.C. formula with respect to convergence (sexuality). This is an attempt to describe to-the best of present knowledge the nature of orgastically potent i.e. healthy sexuality in human beings. It will be called, as Reich did, the Orgastically Potent Genital Embrace. We can begin the description with a man and a woman, both of whom are orgastically potent (as defined by Reich). As indicated on Figure 1-2, they are in a supine position on coronal plane QUVZ. The outline of the male and female figures will represent the vegetative periphery P. The distance between their peripherys should be greater than 0 cm and probably for best results less than 30 cm. The circle in the solar plexus region will represent vegetative center C. The circle G in the region of the genitals will represent the genitalia. The point in G, labeled F, will represent what we will refer to as the focal point. Physiologically, F is located in the male on the underside of the glans penis, in the female on the under- side of the glans clitoris. We will assume that the man and the woman have decided to engage in coitus and are in a comfortable, private location which is conducive to this activity. In state 1, the principle characteristic is sexual arousal or orgonotic lumination as defined i.e. energy direction C-P. The analogous process in mitosisis charac- terized by what is called mitogenic radiation. The energy direction C-P corresponds quantitavely to a profound parasympathetic reaction re: autonomous nervous system. The antithetical energy direction i.e. P-C is associated with a state of anxiety or fear. It corresponds quantitavely to a reaction of the sympathetic nervous system re: The function of the Organism, Chapter VII (seven), section 3. In stage 2, the energy flow has proceeded to a point of beginning to travel from the periphery to the other periphery, i.e. periphery of male to periphery of female and vice versa. This was called by Reich in The Cancer Bipathy "sexual contact." Since these are egoic phenomenon, the radiation will involuntarily contact only the corresponding point of physiology. However, since male and female are dipolar or mutalry antithetical phenomenon, the radiation will exist a point only to impact the opposite corresponding point on the partner's periphery, e.g. radiation exiting the male's left foot will impact the female's right foot. The radiation begins at the feet, being the area farthest from the vegetative center of the human body. Beginning in a nerly linear path, it soon develops into a para- bolic path along the entire anterior periphery. The linear path is along the peri- phery'closest to the mutual axis of symmetry, line segment SX. This is illustrated on Figure 1-3. These parabolic paths correspond to the spindle phenomenon in mitosis. This process, like mitosis, should be more properly thought of as a con- tinual process that has been divided into four stages for convenience of description and analysis. In stage 2a, which is not illustrated the radiation proceeds to the point of involuntary rotation of the male and female toward each other along the mutual axis of symmetry. As illustrated, the male would rotate laterally, pivoting on the individual axis of symmetry line segment RY. The female would rotate medically, pivoting on TW, until they physically embrace one another. The exact degree of rotation with respect to QUVZ is presently unknown, but an educated guess would be male 120 degrees, females 60 degrees. This new position lends itself to signifi- cantly increased sexual arousal and intensified tactile and sensory experience due to the proximity of the partner. It is during this stage; rnuch to the contrast of orgastically impotent coitus, that the genitals become turgid (erection). The vagina has become moist. Then the interpentration of genitals occurs and pelvic thursting begins. In stage 3, pelvic thrusting continues to fusion. Pelvic thrusting is -simply the ,process by which via sexual friction (as defined), orgonotic energy is accumulated at F. Once the energy level reaches a critical point, orgonotic fusion is preci- pitated, lasting for I or perhaps,2 seconds. It is, physically speaking, analogous to an electric arc. However, unlike orgastically impotent coitus, this occurs simul- taneously in both partners. Functionally speaking, the genitals have become a single organ in which, there is only one orgasm, shared by both. Thus the striving for'mutual orgasm, which presently permeates sexual activity, is rendered super- flouous. Mutual orgasm necessarily results from the orgasticlly potent genital embrace. Since F in the male and female are not directly in contact, the existence literally of an arc of sexual energy can be postulated., What the phenomenon of orgonotic fusion is actually like is difficult to imagine since there is nothing like it in contemporary human experience. Since a literal, physical fusion of egos would have occurred, it must mean that the entire experience of the partner up to the time of fusion has been incorporated into the ego of the self. This would truly be a profoundly pleasurble, gratifying and communicative experience. Stage 4 is simply a reversal of the process. After orgonostic fusion there is ejaculation in the male and corresponding contractions (approx. 6) of the vaginal musculature. This takes approx. 15 seconds. However, the couple will remain locked in embrace and gradally the radiating bridges, which have held them to- get her, will recede to theoriginal periphery. In addition to the qualitative difference of an orgastically potent couple, there is the quantitative. I estimate an orgastically potent couple would be capable of 10-15 orgastically potent embraces per day. Thus, there is a theoretical basis for predicting the existence of an entirely different socio-sexual order: one of life-affirmation (as defined) as opposed to one of life-negation (as defined). These are mutually exclusive systems with an irre- versible transition period between. Quite clearly we are presently' enmeshed in a self-peretuating life-negating socio-sexual order. This is the genuine meaning of the sexual revolution. Needless to say, the postulation of the specifies of such a phenomenon is unprecedneted to the best of my knowledge. I will not go into the complex political, religious, historical, characterological, and social ramifications here. Reich has already done this in his The Mass Psychology of Facisn and The Invasion of Compulsorv Sex-Morality. I just want to let it be known to anyone who reads this that I compile this theory myself after reading Reich's work, without which I would still be struggling in the :surrounding mire of confusion, ignorance, and fear. I'd like to end this paper by quoting Reich from The Function of the Orgasm, which is Volume One of The Discovery of the Orgone. This is the last three sentences and was written nearly 40 years ago. "Sexuality and the living proces became identical, and a new avenue of approach to the problem of biogenesis was opened. What was psychology became biophysics and a part of genuine, experi- mental natural science. Its core remains, as always, the enigma of love to which we owe our being." Figure 1-1: Correlation of tension-charge formula, mitosis, orgonotic, sexual High-stepping it Some crooks would not only' take the shirt off your back, they'd take the shoe off your foot as well. At least that's what happened to Robbi-Jo Olsen in Seattle. Seattle police report a man chased Olsen down the street, knocked her to the ground, and made off with one of her high-heeled leather clogs. It was the fourth such attack in the city in recent months. All the victims say the thief absconds with the best of the two shoed they are wearing. We don't know if the shoe fits. Green - but not with envy It was a cold, blustery day in Denver as workers toiled at a downtown high-rise construction site. A wise guy in an existing building next door spotted the shivering workers and held up a sign for them to read. It read: "It's 72 degrees in here." Maybe so, but the workers felt no pangs of jealousy. "It's $15 an hour out here," a worker scrawled in response. So there. 0 Verres de terre A competing fast-food firm says the rumor that McDonald's hamburgers contain ground worms is nonsense - worms cost too. much. "If the public knew the cost, of red worms, they would understand that you couldn't possibly be filling the meat with worms. They're too expensive," Donna- Fleishman of the Atlanta-based Krystal chain said. "They cost about $7.50 a pound." That. of course, is way above the price of Grade A ground beef. But in Chicago, the owner of Earthworms, Inc. said it's only a matter of time before dried worms will take their place alongside the Quarterpounder in the American diet. Darrell Richard said he bakes worm cookies and worm cakes at home about once a week. He even has a collection of 100 recipes using the protein-rich dried worms as food supplements. Here's one way to prepare them: "Boil them for five or six minutes to remove the dirt. Then put them in a 350-degree oven for 15 minutes," Richards advises. "They come out crispy like a french fry." They'd probably go well with McDonald's hamburgers. functions and corresponding energy directions. State T.C. Formula Mitosis 1. tension prophase 2. 2. 3. 4. charge -tnterpenetratio discharge relaxation metaphase n anaphase telophase than the ability to Orgonotic S. F. orgonotic(ego) lumiinat ion radiating(ego) bridge orgonotic(ego) fusion orgonotic(ego) retraction decide with full C. E. D. center periphery periphery periphery center center center periphery knowledge of the Note: This partial listing of names and addresses of Neo-Reichman organizations is for the convenience and information of the reader and is not intended nor should it be construed as a acknowledgment of, endorsement of, or agreement with the contents of this ad. For frther information contact: The Wilhelm Reich Infant Trust Fund, The Inst. for.the New Age of Man 382 Burns St. 340 East 57 St. Forest Hills, New York 11375 New York, N.Y. 10022 The Inst. for Biogenergetic A nal/vsis Robert W. Milnes 144 East 36 St. 16 E. Cedar Ave. New York, N.Y. 10016 Oaklyn, New Jersey 08107 This ad has appeard in: The Colorado Dailv, Boulder, Colorado 9/14/76, The Berkelev Barb, Berkeley, Calif. 10/4/77, The Soho Week/y News, N.Y.C. 7/27/78, TakeOver. Madison, Wisconsin 8/13/78, Majority Report 9/16/78 "F fac ree will is nothing other ts."-F. Engels I-I Vegetative Centers C Genitals G ~p Focal points F! -4 V i I I R S T - 4 - ______ ' '' ' E FEMALE <-0--> tL/) *N\J L 1''~ / U ON "I