-- -. .-' -y :~ ~' -'~ -, '. a. -~ 4 .. I Page Four WHY BUY AT TWICE THE PRICE? WE BUY, SELL AND TRADE O WOODEN SPOONy USED BOOKS . Open Noon v Wed.-Sun. 200 n. 4th ove. 769-4775 ,. THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE 1 " Sunday, April 8, 1973 Sunday, April 8, 1973 , - (Continued from Page 3) same time, marriage can also Will it be any different for them It would be an exercise in futility the grad school routine, of neces- serve as an isolating factor and somewhere else, at another univer- to try and draw a line between sity, demands a certain degree of loneliness for two rather than one sity? pseudo-imtellectualism and Intel- introversion. person. "I think so. There is some set of lectualism. The perceptions -that Sam went older Tom and Nancy, a married grad circumstances unique to Ann Ar- operate on do not travel in straight you get the more you become couple, called and said, "We are bor that make it the way it is. It's lines. Moreover, this problem is not aware of yourself, Who you are. happy with our marriage, but we hard to describe, it's just hard to one which is peculiar to the cam- Ywareyof yourselfw a e.awould like to meet some new peo- meet people here." pus area, for people in the com- You rely upon..yourself, and in a muniytrelteptothehUiversty i sense, sooth yourself with an in- said, '"Most of the people I workdmu;ty relate to the University in ner-communication. You are your ple. We are tired of spending so RAD STUDENTS do not monop- much the same way. A middle- own frame of reference and it be- much time alone together." olize loneliness in Ann Arbor aged native of Ann Arbor and ex- comes increasingly harder to ex- It is interesting to note another, as many of them would have you student at the University comment- ternalize yourself to others. To call from a single male grad who b e 1 i e v e. Aphone-call-collage of ede No aruni vaffilated wth t communicate. Every year Ii live with in my department are mar-4 Ann Arbor is like leaving the shut-thswoarafiaed ihte in Ann Arbor my head gets three ried. When your friends get mar-, ter of a camera open for a time ;University. 'We are caught in a maybe four years older." ried it's hard to be as close to lapse exposure. "There are eight void because of the awesome con- Many grad students get married them as you were." million stories in the naked city." vencration of superior people. It in order to maintain their sanity, Many single grad students com- THIS CANVAS - IS NOW OPEN j makes me self conscious. The so- to have someone whom they can plained about the lack of oppor- FOR THE "EGO - ROCK." Shuf- cial scene in the community of_ communicate with and depend up- tunity to meet each other. At the fle on by. What do you see, what professionals, professor's wives on. This is one answer, but at the same time, they spoke of their in- do you leave? What is figure, what who 'entertain at home' in their abilityto dealawith many under- is ground? Ann Arbor, a city and deliberately subtle hairdos (this vme.itscrcmtacs woman is a beautician), the graduate men and cliques thesbigroneyswhchcforce Sam explained, "I've tried to Many callers spoke of Ann Ar- ca ig cost of ingoney which forces deal with undergraduate women. bor's pseudo-intellectualism as a the conservative atmosphere, the There's a generation gap; I can't, factor which limits communica-s deal-with the pseudo - intellectualism, all serve eryonedeal with theidentity crises they tion and isolates people. It causes to make the people of average are going through. I'm long past a fear of opening your mouth and ability, the townspeople, mistrust that. It's hard to communicate in talking to the person next to you, I.t nivet."n any depth, even though all the whether it be in class, on the the Uimversityi sexual attraction is there . . . the street, or even in the community. This woman went on to explain PUZ LES Igrad women I know can't deal too "They may be more intelligent, that most of her friends, the peo- easily with undergrad men either." and think you a mere simpleton." plc with whom she had grown up, have left Ann Arbor. She explain- TEACUIN AIDS 'ed the exodus in that the cost of * tACHINb AIDS "There is some set of circumstances unique living was too high pointing to Ann t their failure to find a niche within to rbrh ma e tne it the University. She lives alone with hard to describe, it's just hard to meet her mother and stays here because hardshe is tied to the University Hos- peop e here.''pital for health reasons. Admittedly she seemed to be ob- CIENC DEPTsessed with loneliness. However, SCIENCE DEPT. This problem can be raised to This phenomenon is very conducivese dithnelines. Howe r__L . ____ __-.,she did pose an interesting incite Memoirs of a McGovern Worker. The party on the White House Lawn by Daniel Biddle Something f " CHESS " 3M BOOKSHELF GAMES " BACKGAMMON " Complete 5 FROM OUR CRAFT DEPT. an unbeatable selection of crafts to make and give. Midwest's Most Unique Store 224 South Main Street Phone 663-0310 Open Monday and Friday evening 'til 8:30 1nmmmmmn the nth degree for the foreign grad to stimulating discussions in class-°. student. Juan a Venezuelan grad es where in the silence one can to loneliness in Ann Arbor student in engineering, explained, hear mental sharpshooters loading'. "Many people think Ann Arbor 1 "There are very few of my people ammunition. It is very helpful also s cosmopolitan. The small-big city on campus. When I meet a girl, I to have this in mind when con- with something for everyone. It's don't have a language barrier to templating an attempt to meet new a myth. In a big city you can find overcome, but I find I -have a great people. a place for yourself. Its hard to cultural one. When I graduate I How does this pseudo-intellect= do that here. plan to return home to my coun- ualism fit into the total picture ofMEANWHILE try. It is very unlikely that I could Ann Arbor? BACK on campus ask an American woman to come Sheri, a junior, commented, "It' . . . The peculiar degree of with me and adapt to my culture." becomes a defense mechanism for transcience takes its toll nm lonely In this struggle between emo- most people. You need it to stay Abo to get somet ing.mey stay tional and intellectual balance alive in the academic and social until they do and then leave. some grad students lose. Or maybe competition on this campus. We've Because of their living situa- they win. They leave Ann Arbor got a campus full of 'gifted peo- tion while they are here, many and continue their education else- ple' many of whom have the in- oIchslend mostaof ther tme where Why? flated egos to prove it. It becomes a popMorepemlli eif-cm A female grad had this to say, necessary for them to define them- aos ore poei in moffcm-r "Three of my friends have left selves in terms of who they have pus housing than in most major Ann Arbor. Not because they were done better than, or how much euniversities in the country. People unhappy with their grad programs, smarter they are than the person are living i is.late glc ricas but because they had no other who is sitting next to them in lec- over campusthsingle rooms, lives outside of their studies." ture." atd asments. houses g tr-e and basements. Because most stu- dents move every year, many are forced to live with people who walk out of newspaper ads. There is the constant roommate hassle where some people who are just incompatible must live together in order to come up with enough money to pay rent every month. This situation is not at all un- common. Often times, those people 'who have a hard time meeting and communicating with people on campus, also find themselves un- able to speak to those- people with whom they are living. This could be trueefor arvariety of reasons. Rick, a grad-student in the Busi- ness Administration School, tells Continued on Page 8) The trouble with the McGovern campaign is that you've got too many fuzzies, Dan. Too many lighter-than air, "true believer" idealists and not enough M a y o r Daleys. -Allen Baldwin Bowling Green, Ohio October, 1972 What kind of shape is this cam- paign in? It's in terrible shape. Yes, there's still a chance . . . you have to understand something. You have to understand that George McGovern is an incredibly compassionate man. He's too hon- est. A committee of 12 other peo- ple should filter everything he says before it goes out to the public, because he speaks straight from the heart. -ABC Reporter Bill Matney Chicago, Illinois August, 1972 WOOD COUNTY, OHIO, L ATE OCTOBER - An hour before sun- set, within sight of Toledo - a horizon of smokestacks - we ride down the flatlands on Interstate 75 in a blue Pinto rented to Mc- Govern-Shriver '72/Ohio. ".. the next time we call Cleve- land, we got to tell Barb to sneak us $500 for the farm mailing, au- thorized or not . . . you know. Heath is convinced that George is gonna make a farm appearance for nationwide broadcast in Find- ley next Sunday, but everyone else says it's not definite at all." "Heath Reichmann is 95 per cent talk." "Hey, Obie, is it true that Frye sleeps with his mother?" "Lives with 'her. I don't know about sleep." "Are all farmers crazy? They are, aren't they?" "Naa. Just stupider than hell." "Christ, look at this, I've never seen so many trucks in all my -_ hey, do you think we should do the mailing to Van Wert County? You know, there's gotta be some Demo- cratic votes down there." "Hhhhhaaa . . . not at this late date. Anybody gonna vote for Mc- Govern down there, gonna vote for him no matter what the hell we do." "Hey." "Yeah?" "What are those?" "What?" "In that truck." "Those? THOSE?" "Yeah, those." "Ha! Those are sugarbeets! Hahahahahah! Fuck, man. You don't even know what the hell a SUGARBEET looks like. Ha- hahahaha." "Fuckin' eh, man. I'm a city boy." "That's no lie." ... I'm thinking about shav- ing off my mustache." "No, don't do that, Dan. Any- thing that makes you look like you're older than 19, that's good for us." "Yeah, I suppose so . .. you know, if we both keep shaving with that same razor, we'll look like we've been through a war." "We have. Just keep shaving and don't forget what state you're in." "But after Election Day, I'm letting my hair grow back. I don't want to look like Steve Straight when we have our party on the White House lawn." "I wouldn't stay up all night worrying about that if I were you." FOR WEEKS AND WEEKS we lived with this crazy notion that someday we, all the thousands of us from all over the country, and George, would have a party out there on the White H o u s e lawn, and we would invite every- body. Aware that such a party could only occur under one condition, I spent most of the three months before Election Day, 1972, working for George McGovern's presiden- tial campaign in the Northwest section of Ohio, where there are a number of factories, a handful of towns, and many, many farm- houses. For the last seven weeks I was the state campaign's Fifth Con- gressional District coordinator. Owen Bair, "Obie," the man who told me not to have my mustache off, was my assistant and loyal sidekick. Brothers in the cause, our lives rose and fell for that magnified space of time on canvassing re- sults, contributions, volunteers' numbers and enthusiasm, local re- action to oir efforts, and nation- wide opinion surveys. We worked out of a small and uncomfortable office in Bowling Green, the district's approximate geographical center and the only place for miles that resembled a college town. The small and uncomfortable office had previously belonged to The American Cancer Society's local chapter. Once a man came in waving a check for $20, and just We gathered around us e( couple of organizers . . . ndm leaped togethler into tie eggheater of the JMc overn campaign as we were preparing the red car- pet treatment (five different and colorful McGovern buttons, t w o elegant posters, and all the leaf- lets you can eat) he declared that he was in the wrong place a n d could we please direct him to the Cancer society. The "McGovern coalition" f o r Ohio's Fifth District could n o t have been quite like anything that part of the world had ever seen before. For some of us, like me, had conversely never seen that part of the world before. Strangers to the planet Ohio, John Kenneth Gal- braith's son Jamie and I came to Bowling Green in August armed with haircuts, instructions, p r e- conceptions about "the sticks", and spirit. And ignorance. 4' 1 f f- s '. ~Rabb, hots high is the price of -- / '-'t C s ' , i . ,"- , f' '' NEW AT BIMBO'S NO COVER CHARGE v -- _ It took us weeks to understand that the rush of sugar-sweet a i r when you drove down from Toledo was not anti-pollutant or a i r freshener but cornsilk. In Ohio, the harvest provides the perfume. On the other, more calloused hand, we were assisted by a certain rotund man.. . "Can all of Ohio be this flat, Al?" "No . . . this is one of the flatter reaches. The highest point in Wood County is that overpass coming up on our right," said the rotund man one day as he drove us up to meet the Democratic county chairman one day in late August. "Ha! Are you serious? That's hi- larious!" Jamie, the buoyant 22- year old optimist and self-styled pro, and I, the nervous but excit- ed 19-year old rookie, began to laugh. The rotund man, a long-time re- sident of Wood County. cringed with mock pride. "Jamie," he intoned most ser- iously, "that remark was not hu- morous in intent.' We continued to laugh. This cOd not greatly please the rotund man, who knitted his Polish eyebrows furiously and harrunlphed at our impertinence. But Allen Baldwin was not real- ly angry at us. 26 years old, al- ready something of a veteran poli- tical ace with a growing boss-like presence among the arena's Demo- cratic biggies, big Al was our best ally. WE CALLED HIM King Farouk. Al was liberal, almost radical in his practi( seousl3 ance. Itw of the him. We of org: dred gether McGo, It w emergi Democ faces. vassalt wives, retiree dents presen lived t for tw The ered a gressn well-ft Delber re-elec of the Befo party dentia Fifth. Our thing i tory t( the Ma Pauldi: (popul farm o We calls a: but th lawn p OLDT MON. & TUES. starts at 8:30 AND IME MOVIES ONE WEEK Buster Keaton MASQUERADOR Charlie Chaplin MANY MORE °' , . - , (PLUS WED. & THURS.) NO COVER CHARGE M LO HIS GUITAR AND HEAD FULL OF COUNTRY MUSIC BIMBO'S 1 i4 E. WASHINGTON BEER, WINE & COCKTAILS SAM'S STRE' 207 E. Liberty II