Wednesday, June 26, 1974 ;time horn sten to on the begun. When of lodging, it ad taken our 1 the wrong d the wrong o worry: they else. on the eleva- sen doors, the ut to be the ng room in the sacy. detoured to a sme cheap air eat at the Viet y's Globe and eek wet streak th fear in our eks, we started ariposa crowd . Hundreds of d colors waited transported to nown folk fes- the demise of larbour on the as Rennie, in a behind and Damelot of ac- young musicians, played guitar and sang to an overflow audience at each of his con- certs; and the Saddleback Dancers did some indigenous hoofing and some pretty neat .Ed-Sullivan-type juggling, too. And performers from the States were a credit to their sex, or whatever. Malvina Reynold kept the women songwriters' work- shop howling in sympathetic appreciation; Glenn Ohrlin, working cowboy and rodeo rider, sang ballads and laments to charm the most sophisticated listener; Almeda Riddle sang old hill ballads that she learn- ed at her grandmother's knee; Bessie Jones and Family did traditional shouts and spiri- tuals, and led the audience in several "play parties;" Kyle Creed and friends made out- standing bluegrass music; David Amram played ragtime French horn that tickled everybody's fancy; Pete Seeger once again worked his musical magic and made an amateur crowd harmonize like the Mormon Tabernacle Choir; and Steve Goodman did his stumbling-drunk charade -and played and sang his way into everyone's heart. THE PEOPLE who came to Mariposa were comrades by virtue of their common love of. music, eager to help one another, and un- daunted by rain, hunger, and fatigue. Each night when the program was finished, a seemingly endless line collected at the ferry dock, and all those people, cold, sunburned and famished, sang songs together across the harbor and into the Toronto twilight. The festival must have been an experi- ment in clean living; we got out of Toronto and back to Ann Arbor with only one hitch: we had to pay $1.43 tax on all those cheap cigarettes.