,. , '. - Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Sunday, April 8, 1973 ;unday, April 8, 1973 THE MICHIGAN DAILY MAGAZINE Friske.* . (Continued from Page 7 tion in the slums who live on wel- fare find it economically beneficial to have large families." Friske knew that he was tread- ing on shaky ground but boldly added, "integration is planned for the demoralization of education and the perpetration of conmmnism ..- we are bringing together races that would rather remain separ- ate." "Most intellerts., pseudo or otherwise, deal with the conspira- torial theory of hi'story simply by ignoring it. They never at- tempt to refute the evidence." Gary Allen. None Dare Call it Conspiracy "I HOPF YOU ARE tkin a curate notes," Friske said. e seemed to have spotted a possible threat. "Not that I am afraid of the pres, bcaue Ikno~w that they media either distorts the news ort totally ignores it to the benefit of the insiders." Friske seemed more at ease once he had warned the reporter that he knew all the tricks of the trade lie calmly added, "its because most of the press is not respon- sible enough to tell the truth that the John Birch Society exists." * -' - "there is one organization wvhich has found a powerful weapon against the minority and its con- trol over America . . . The weapon is Truth, the strategy is education, the organization is the John Birch Society." a quote fror a Friske newsletter Friske is a firm believer in the Birch philosophy, and maintains that if evervone understood and became aware of the "extensive Birch investigations into the world- wide-communist conspiracy" that the insiders would be expunged. from the United States. "Young people like yourself are imtentionallv kept ignorant of the truth so that they can be used by the establishment for their hor- rendous goals, but when I am given a chance to talk to students they so~on understand the truth and those who attack me leave like lambs taken to slaughter." destruction o our co" tr are ' " * 3'oe n s thing, but not listening to one an- galloping fast toward completion. ...n.m s . . other-. Dan Smoot, Former Assistant to (cniudfo aeeThe party scene in Ann Arbor J. Edgar Hoover, written as a is probably the best place to meet testimonial to None Dare call it of his situation. "I didn't go to people. Let's get hypothetical ... Conspiracy, undergrad school here, so when I most people dre high and looking As the reporter left the capitol came from New York I knew very for a good time. You don't usually building he felt more tired than few people. The three guys I live need an invitation, you can go slaugtere. Frske as s sur with all have girlfriends. They are with a friend who was invited, or of himself that debate would have ,wrapped up in each other and we who knows someone there. ilow- been futile, The air echoed with don't get a chance to talk very ever, when you get there, you may hypoti gogs maatig fom heoften. I've tried to meet women be forced to break into a tight hynicgngs emnatingr fro th here' but it's hard. There is no 'clique of friends. That's okay too. the street. An image of young stu- :where to go. It's depressing to If you can do it. You may find dents being devoured bv some red- come home alone on a Saturday that everyone is too high to talk. white and blue personification of ,night, when everyone in your The people might -be sitting on the truth, honesty and tfl'e American ,aoartment is sleeping with their floor, staring off into the ozone, way arose before his eyes. ,girlfriends. It doesn't matter any- listening to music. It may be a lit- If all he needed was a chance more though. I'm graduating and tle hard to get a message off into to publicize his views then lie etigheel tofAnrb."the ozone unless you are in the would get his chance. Besides -Al dropped out of school tw~o same state of consciousness. You Friske had been incredibly friend- x'ears ago after comnieting his can get there, but the next morn- lv, honest and accommodating. sophomore year. He lives in a ig you may wonder if the whole The reporter passed the Filibus- single room and works forty hotirs siuaio wa relor nt.i youe ter Bar and was happy that he a week. He comrmented on his lone- ra comuniater woith anone, had found something good to say liness in this city. "Working full orwa ritc jut ano te co is o about Friske. tume, I don't have much time for eperinet d oawoels . . . myself. I look around for people to XT WAS INTERESTING to see, as deal with, but it's hard to find our conversation continued, anyone that I would like to do that l-riske was still as honest, things with. I've be'omne introvert- friendly and accommodating asc adsmeie I feeli os aswthlneiesTe ny-hngta "If enough Americans read act upon NDCC they really save the Republic. from the spirators-whose plans for and can con- the of other comic book experiences and ch~aracters.as rit AnnArbor Being hypothetical it can be this way, it does not hav e to be. Someone offered an alternative. A woman caller, Rosemarie, ex plained, "I am 31 years - old and just moved here from Chicago. I am starting a dating service. You pay $15.00 and I give von a ques- FLOWERS ottt Ie AND GI FTS 3 334 South State Street Ann Arbor, Michigan 48108 P1 ne: 66 3549 44 rA 5 k,. ___ _ But now six months later he sounds different. F riske was de- feated in the last election for his attemt tocaptre te cogres- Pleasant ' rd vicinity, ie is no longer in the State House of Rep- resentatives. le has returned to his ho e o i s Ape orchard onlyvontil don't have the guts tOprint it.' o wa p ease to notice that keens me going nerson in one ru into. The whom vou can stood." is mnavhe thnt one tho',sand that volt one person with talk' and be under- Curious Used Book Shop, Too COMICS-SCIENCE FICT ION BASE BA LL CA RDS-P ULPS PA PE RBACKS-H A RDBA CKS Curious Used Book Shop, Too 340 S. STATE (upstairs)' Open 1-6 761-0112 t t I I '- DOWNTOWN HONDA N 7 WORLD'S BIGGEST SELLER SA LES- SE RVC E- PA RTS - ACC ESSOR IES WALKING DISTANCE FROM CAMPUS 310 E. WASH INGTON 665-8637 WENK'S Sports Center Ste'-e is o'ut of school and mo'-d trnr' oli u.ItK n n o A\nn Arbor from Detroit, After formation and match von up withZ two months here he said. "Ann Ar- another client. You geA t dae ye eve ee in he people r that you pay $3.00 a date. Soraieone 100 hip to talk to around ier-e I'd should start a Lonely I leart's C lub -ather imu around with the craiv ii Annr Arhor.'' unkies in Detroit. They' may roll mnd rin peonle off, but at lea4 W LIEN TRYING to find out xw'li ,f'f you mni nd. I thought ther-e judgenments. You might ev en be gould be mnor-e to do in Ann Arb-es' asking the wrong qirestion, for there are so mnam\ more people loneliness is only a svrmptoni whose hcrc I'm goime hack< to I )etr'oit at cuse goes as deep as Ann Ar-bor., least it's reaL'' as deep as the Univ ersity, or as Where do you go to meet penle deep as life in Arierica. Ilowever, place. Ihow about tthe movis ' ureins ro ie aT ,eople "at a move. ""ou sian "'ve become watch a screen, expecting enough ' . silence to hear or hide in the lines, introve rted a nd The bar scene? Well here's what feel obsessed with Maya Jo a sophomore, comment- loneliness,, ed, "Even when I'm really lonely, I have no motivation to go t1 a show, the ending doesn't have to bar and get picked up. You feel be good or bad." wary after -being undressed when when you have a city full of peo- you walk in the door, and get tired pie who are in tune to what it of getting lines layed on y'ou. means to "grow up", and are try- You've heard them all in high ing to understand who and why school. I like to meet people who they are, from one day to the next; are interested in meeting me, not it is only natural to find some peo- my body., There are mind people -pie who are lost and alone. Some adbody people, unfortunately people -go through this when they after meeting too niany body peO- are young, some when they are pie, you're mind gets horny." older, others not at all. Ann Arbor a lto if youghret drnk whole process. and listen to music. Ifyou try t* 4* pick up a girl, it gets to be strange. Ann Arbor', /hidIcagan They go to the bar alone, or with a girl friend, and then don't want U.S.. - -- to be approached. It's an awkward, The movie is always the sanie', situation where a guy has two only the characters change, In the strikes against him. A girl sits Spring comes the intermission be- there and as you approach her; you tween acts. There is the great exo- can feel yourselfl ben tegez dsisout of Ann Arbor, and the neu- thinking, 'now what's this dude fused into mainline America. want froni me? Let's see what his Stare through the tunnel-at-the- line is."' end-of-the-sidewalk, into the base- Iment of the universe. It is quiet, A N AGE OLD PROBLEM mee. pheaceful rThe grounds crew swveep a woman . . . swoonin' and spoon- Advance tickets available at the in'. Two people saying the same S.A.B. So sinks the day-star in the ocean bed, And yet ANON repairs his dropping head, And tricks his beams, and with new-spangled ore' Flames in the forehead of the morning sky . .. JOHN MILTON Robert HoydeA Morge Piercy Richord Grossincier T HE 7th A NN UA L ISSU E OF WILL BE ON SALE MON.-FRI-. APRIL 9-13 IN TH E FISHBOWL AND BOOKST-ORES IN AUGUST, MY FRIEND who .goes to a famous Ivy League School suggested that I read Tropic of Cancer. One rainy Fri- day night in October I bought the book, took it home, read three pages and, electrified, set out for an all-night walk. On Sunday I finished Cancer and, within a couple of weeks, read Tropic or Capricorn, which was the o n I y- other of Henry Miller's books no- torious enough for me to have heard of. Two days before Thanksgiving I found myself in the library with an hour to kill before riding home to parents and turkey. Possibly be-- cause it was a slim book, possibly because I liked the title, I began reading a book by an author I'd never heard of: Collages by Anais Nmn. It was a strange book, I thought; I'd never read anything like it for being abstract, stvllsed, full of unusual happenings. Imag- ine sailing around on a houseboat! I got halfway through before I had to head for home, but in some corner of my mind I made myself a vague promise to finish it some- time, Two Weeks after Thanksgiving, riding w-ith stranger from Ann Ar- bor to New York City, the strang_- ers being people whose names I had seen written on a wall asking for someone to share expenses on a triip east, I spent a Saturday night sleeping on a couch in an aarutment at Penn State Univer- sity. I tried to go to a bar that Saturday night -- someone told me that all the action in town was in the bars - but they were check- ing ID's at the door arid I. not yet turned twenty-one, couldn't c u t the mustard ini Pennsylvania even thoughbc homet inbMichigan thse many drinks as I had money to pay for. So, quite early in the eve- ning I would lip Onl the couch, alone in the apartment, with a book that I found on the kitchen ob Aais m It was a eat story even if I came In in the mIddle. I flipoed through a hundred pages or so before I fell asleep, mostly reading the parts about Henry Mil- ler, who I was delighted to discov- er was one of the major charact- ers in the life described. And then: New York City, caught in mid-town Manhattan in a pour- ing rain, without an umbrella, tire ofthesubayhavin stood at the front by the engineer to watch the lights on the tracks all the way from Brooklyn to the Cloisters in the Bronx, and just the day before having spent s i x hours at an Eric Bohmer double fature, stayin out of the rai and in order to improve my French. And so, soggy in my long grey overcoat, I slipped into the New York Public Library, the big one, at 42nd Street and Fifth Avenue. At the time I was reading A Tree Grows in Brooklyn: I had it in my snapsack, I was halfway through. But the fellow at the desk informed me that one didn't read one's own books in the library and, as a matter of fact, one didn't even use the library, the real lib- rary, unless one was doing re- search of some kind, and so would I like to go down the stairs to where there was a lending library for people like me?s I went down the stairs. There was a little room at the bottom with a lot of books, shelves of books almost touching one another. People walked crab- like to look for books, and of course nobody could pick a book from a shelf below waist level because it was next to impossible to bend down in those narrow aisles. Na- "I triedI tO imagine her in the cafe with Henry Miller in 1932" A Spy ine by Richard Streicker turally, I figured the good books were to be found on the l ow e r shelves. Was the library not lo- cated on 42nd Street? And sure enough, when I stop- ped down I found a book with a provocative title by an author I had now resolved to read: House of Incest by Anais Nn. Barring the exit was a counter' with librarians behind, and t h e familiarapparatus0 for checkin Could I ask a stranger to take a book out for me if I explained my situation and showed how I was an honest, earnest young college student, temporarily out of college, to be sure, but thoroughly trust- worthy nevertheless? 0, not in New York , city of distrust, and certainly not with a book called House of Incest. So I picked out a remote corner of the tile floor, careful to stay as far as possible from the disapprov- ing eyes of librarians, spread my grey Salvation Army overcoat be- neath me, and began to read. By the third page I had my notebook out and was frantically copying passages, whole pages, which ex- pressed exactly, but exactly, t h e way I felt. I must have copied half the book, I was so struck by the words, and as I copied I said the words to myself, savoring t h e m . Feet flapped around me all the time I was reading and writing, people stepped over me as they went down the aisle. I noticed them, I was acutely aware of Vhem, in fact, aware that this motion in the form of moving feet was going on around me at the same time that something extraordinary was going on in the book, that there was the clear vision of the author which contrasted with my peri- pheral vision of the chaos of feet marching around me., When I finished reading after an hour and a half and closed the book I felt as if I were sealing a cyclone between the cardboard covers, and as I put the book back on the shelf I thought, isn't it funny that none of the people walking by here know that there's acyclone contained in a skinny * * * HEN I RETURNED TO ANN WARBOR, I checked the f i r s t volume of Anais Nin's Diary out of the library. I read it during coffee breaks and lunch h o u r s while I worked as a clerk at regis- tration for the University of Mich- igan's winter term. There were two other clerks doing the same job I did, We were the first cle-rk stu- dents saw as. they came through the line, and our job was to check the forms and send people on their way. We sat at low desks: in a week I saw one-third of the stu- dents in the university from waist level. At Christmas I bought the other volumes of the Diary and read them: two, three, four. I had scoured the Ann Arbor bookstores for copies of House of Incest to give as Christmas presents; the six copies I found were all the o n e s available on one particular Satur- day in December, so for one day at least I hadI a monopoly In the town on a wonderful little book. One night I gave my good buddy Herb his copy of House of Incest. He thanked me, of course, but when I drove him home that night he was drunk and left the book on the dashboard. Miffed, I gave it to a girl I Janet, whc the cheerli friendo football p1: the Air Fc Janet wen and was major and writer. When I I searched teaching a course, on Nin, I said, Finally rence frea agred to study (wh. lates as '"G for me on she had o Lawrence. n e sa Wen? Te som or to do charge. I I ing the $2 els,. devout reading pa And now s What do Nothing, Bc nj am ver -iyof scared to At the be Y had been ing iAbso] Nm. He w didn't hay Who is me, Who Gunther E tonal forr the Diary? ledge, my We talked vendor at summers: on almost played in had fantas phonist: I. play guitai talked abc Politics, a talked for I left his But Ana: Professor I see what EVERY 1M letters Janet in EB the Diaries subway w against he ing. She wi ing friends stone mar would be I Anais Nin '30's. In o creating P - Janet wa paper, she young and Sappho ar Anne Sext poem calle Lonely Mai talking ab< ing her, tl: meant a lo did Anais I as a man?' I smiled es, in a lett (Con