editors: mary long jo narcotty barb eornell sundaty magazine inside: page four-books page five- perspective Number 8 Page Three Novembe FEATUR A skeptic's brief journey through Esalen By DEBRA HURWITZ man introduces Janet Lederman words and jargon which is mean- in the room, mostly students, but partner's hands in yours. Feel for happier once I have them and Julian Silverman, co-directors ingless but very hip. several middle - aged people and the bone structure. Really learn my nose. She asks us w IM SITTING in an uncomfortable of the Esalen Institute in Big Sur, even three sextagenarians as well. those hands." I equeeze my part- pened during this game. S chair in the Union ballroom, re- California. E s a 1 e n. Every time TOW SPEAKING from behind us Why are they here, I wonder? ner's hands in what I hope is a to know if we experienced porter's notebook firmly in hand, sometime says it, he or she says it so we have to crane our necks What do they expect? And aren't meaningful way, still feeling more prises. At first, there is sile to justify my presence at a meet- as though of course everyone knew uncomfortably to see her, Janet those old people miserable on the silly than anything else. But my a brave soul ventures a c ing for something which I know is exactly what it was. I have no idea asks us to abandon the neat rows floor? partner's hands are warm and re- It is a stupid comment, so: stupid. Esalen. The name sounds what it is and am considering ex- of chairs facing the front of the like something in a unicorn tapes- posi my i ce p di room in favorof a ragged crunch Janet's voicetis smooth and even assuring; besides, his eyes told dabout sharing. Now others try or maybe like something In- enlightenment from my neighbor. of chairs, coats, and bodies off to as she asks us o open our eyestand bo. age Irsupose, yte dian. The ballroom is very big and But I don't ask. Whatever Esalen one side. We comply, giggling and take a picture of what we see, then I do.ytheirownmake very establishment and, most of muttering nervously. As for me, all close our eyes and process the pic- gets worse. "Open your eyes, of their own. "My partner all, very unlike a place where a is, I am suspicious. hope of a s i m p 1 e, informative ture. I do all this, trying hard to stare at your partner. This is were colder than mine." mind - expanding, excuse me, an Janet walks among us, in the speech on which I can base a story give them a chance, to pretend at agony. I want to laugh, I want conscious of that differ awareness-expanding experience is aisles between the rows of chairs- are gone. I know, with awful sure- least that I'm interested in taking to close my eyes or look away; felt barriers breaking do to take place. I'm a skeptic, I em- chairs which are arranged in the ness, that we're going to have to pictures of my floor-level view of at to do anythin but ste phatically disbelieve in both the room as if ready for some sort of play games. the Union ballroom. All I can see at these brown eyes which stare AMIDST ALL THIS, I t validity and the justifiability of alumni conference. Janet, who has Janet asks us to sit on the floor anyway is hair and skin, as, in the back, while our entwined hands faws and feel all th psychology, and I suddenly wonder a very soothing voice and a very and close our eyes. She has also iteresthof expanding my-aware- n dintepre wih Ig what on earth I'm doing in the severe f a c e, mumbles something requested t h a t we refrain from ness, I have removed my glasses. I building up during the ga ballroom at the Union waiting for about destructing and immediately talking during t h i s exercise. We want no blockage; how do I know ,Janet mumbles something tell me that talking abo someone who thinks he can expand I feel justified in my suspicions. try, but our nerves are too much my awarenes isn't going to expand experience is the one sur my awareness to arrive. This is going to be just like an for us: giggles and whispers break through my eyes? about destrucing and imme- ruin it. Tonight, I wond R.D. Laing poem or a Psych 101 the s i le n c e from time to time. The voice, for Janet is wandering d.itely/Ifeel justified in my possible that these people Fally, several minutes late, a discussion, r e p 1 e t e with catch- There are maybe a hundred people around the room and is no longer ous, that they really sw visible to me, t e l l s me to turn slihtytae noterpitue nd suspicions. This is going to this garbage. When I th slightly, take another picture andon what I've done, what process it. After what seems an in- PsyCh 101 dis- enced, I realize I've fe terminable silence, it repeats this clammy hands, a few Ic directive. I, for one, am unutterab- cussion, replete with catch I've grinned maniacally ly bored: everything looks the same into whose eyes I have a -hair and skin--and I'm positive words and jargon. I know, tried to stare; most of a some oaf will eradicate my precious altogether as if I'd rat glasses in the process of one of the with an awful sureness, that the library writing my th thliibrry ritngnysh - slight turns. ,were going to have to play per. Even footnotes, it; Finally, the direction change. me as I sit in my cram! "Turn toward a stranger, someone games." tion on the hard floor, ~ you didn't come with." There is a to earnest drivel, even 71great r u s t 1 e as we all shift; I x ° 4 are less stupid than th icringe for my glasses. g alucky thing Big Sir is so cget clammier by the moment. I a place, I think; otherw: ~ "0PEN YOUR EYES, take a pic- speak, I can't help it; I make people would have died ture of this stranger, your part- some inane remark about how hard dom ears ago. ner; close your eyes, process the it is to stare. My partner nods m a. picture," intones Janet in that ever in sympathetic agreement. We play some more gam so warm and smooth voice. I do At last, Janet tells us to close I later learn are called so: my partner has lovely brown our eyes and "disconnect." We do games" in the expansion eyes and, blessedly, he looks as if so, then she tells us to turn slight- I have to admit it, I f he feels as silly as I do. I wonder ly, find a new stranger and repeat comfortable, more at one if his eyes are really as dreamy as the whole process. Is it my imagin- various partners, and, y they look or whether the blur I ation or is the staring easier this alive. We stretch, we star see is only the result of my own time? Is my awarenes expanding, to telegraph words, we t myopia. I'm not processing; I'm I wonder? Will I know when it disconnect - and I do f wondering what comes next. And, happens? Aware? Well, maybe. 6 in the background of my thoughts, Janet tells us to open our eyes; Debra Hurwitz is the Dai Hr ¢ . 'r I still wonder what I'm supposed now she is behind us, so we all S~ e ad t he.anfo Eitaoraetor &;'~4.~$ *' x... -~-.,. to be thinking and feeling. turn to see her. I grope for my ant Director. Doily Photo by SCOTT ECCKER "With your eyes closed, take your glasses and feel immeasurably See A SKEPTIC'S, Paj r 9, 1975 ES back on hat hap- he wants any sur- nce, then comment. me drivel , encour- nanity of remarks r's hands "I wasn't ence." "I wn. tifle guf- e warmth iad been me evap- ulian will ut a gut e way to er if it's are seri- allow all ink back I experi- lt a few :y hands, at people abashedly all, I felt er be at story pa- seems to ped posi- listening footnotes is. It's a beautiful ise, these of bore- Les, which "contact biz and, 'eel more with my es, more e,, we try ouch and feel good. ly's Assist- ge 6 Bob Dylan and Joan Baez's new tour: A return to the earlier, simpler years By DAN BIDDLE, PAUL HASKINS and PAULINE LUBENS THE TOWN OF North Dartmouth didn't know Bob Dylan and Joan Baez were visiting until two days before they arrived, but not much warning was needed. Tickets sold out in eight hours to 3,000 people eager to be crushed into a tiny Massachusetts gymnasium. It was a strange and tentative thing that Baez and Dylan and their tour were doing here: They were trying to cut through the commercial grease of the rock business; to play and sing, not for the record label or the media or the manager or the money, but for the audience and for the fun of it. NOBODY IS MORE excited about that concept than tour father- confessor Allen Ginsberg, anonv- mously seated amidst the North Dartmouth ticket-holders, as Liddv as a little kid, tanoing his feet and clapping his hands. "The primary thing is comradeshin. For the first time, the money just doesn't mat- ter!" He laughs with missionarv joy as if the no-monev ideas had come. from God to him and he passed it on to the band. "The best of the visions of the sixties hath come togethbr in this tour. It will grow and rise to a scream of joy crazy quilt of top performers whose enthusiasm makes up for what they lack in cohesion: guitarist Roger McGuinn, who borrowed so much from Dylan's style; Mick Ronson, master of the "glitter rock" guitar when he worked with David Bowie; folksinger and song- writer Ramblin' Jack Elliot; "Nashville" star Rone Blakely; and Dylan's old touring buddy Bob Neuwirth. Rounding out the Revue cast are violinist Scarlett Rivera, strings prodigy David Mansfield, only 19, and rhythm guitarist David Soule. The first set is just hitting its stride when a bowed leather-jack- eted figure took the stage, guitar in arm. The broad brim of a Billy- The-Kid hat rises to reveal the classic' Dylan profile, and the crowd erupts. DYLAN'S ANIMATED gestures and belting voice in hard rock renditions of "When I Paint My Masterpiece", "It Ain't Me" and "Hard Rain" make clean breaks from the tight-lipped reserve that married his '74 tour with The Band. The North Dartmouth throng seems as stunned as it is thrilled at Dylan's presence beneath the gym scoreboard. The tour designed to rediscover the crowd ranport the right ones, his baffled backup men in futile pursuit. Hecklers, sounding like leftovers from a mid-week pep rally, regu- larly pierce Dylan's mystique and Baezo charm with misplaced vul- garity. "Lay, Lady, Lay, Bobby" a drun- ken fan demands. "Everybody must get stoned," another shouts. "Who's getting stoned?" the ur- ban troubadour mumbles into the mike, sparking a roar of laughter in an overly responsive audience. BUT THE SPOILERS designs seem harmless enough com- pared to the behind-the-scenes treachery of Zebra Productions head Barry Imhoff. The iron-fisted roving band of Zebra commandos, leave about as much to chance as the organizers of the 1972 Republican Convention. Camera carriers are disarmed or turned back at the gate. Media types are routinely snub- bed or ignored. A black Adonis. far too cool to don the standard Rolling Thunder T-shirt,.mans the side stairs to the stage. Hands on hips, weight shift- ed to one leg like Don Dufek be- twpen hits, he has the "subdued- but - potentially - ferocious" act down to a science - just the sort of crowd deterrent big stars drool inch the.man who's just been shat upon in a big way, Colin fingers Zebra as the cause of his misery. "Bary Imhoff uses his men like police!" he spits. Colin recalls how the SMU has spent $200 on a rented room and security guard for a Dylan interview, and how the Zebra shock troops are completely ignoring the setup. Colin is joined in his tirade by a dejected covey of student ushers. But no one in the audience knew or cared. THE GYM DARKENS. From across the auditorium two beams of light meet at center stage. In that spot - as the cur- tain rises - Bob Dylan and Joan Baez stand together, look at each other, and sing "The Times They Are A Changin'." After the roar of applause dies, they sing each verse like church music, softer and softer, their voic- es and guitars alone in the silent, dark, gym. It is as if, for just a few moments, the times had not changed at all since the years when that song meant everything. They soared through four songs together, flirting, laughing, ex- changing corny, lovey - dovey glances. And they do all the things Dylan couldn't bring himself to do in the last dozen years. Daily Photo by PAULINE LUBENS hards who earnestly followed the Dylan and Baez split, his with- drawal into seclusion, his casting off of Bleeker St. friends, and his widely herald second coming a year ago. Unfettered fun and music is all he wants. But it looks likerhe's getting a rebirth of spirit for his one including Dylan. The finale is a rousing rendition of "This Land is Your Land" that would have made Woodie Guthrie smile. THE DIAMONDS, AS in Baez's song to Dylan, are dazzling, and the rust is tolerable. When he walked off the stage, smiling and waving, he was nothing like the