2      Michigan State News, E a s t L an sin g , Michigan
              H e have had it before. His                                                                                                                               II liy tltt we insist on /tlati
       tory has sifted and simplified                                                                                                                               tudes ?
       its causes into “ Slavery and
       Secession," " I nions vs. Man                                                                                                                                    II In can't we accept part of
       agement                         or " Horn b- I lirow                                                                                                        the guilt ?
       ing I narchists."
             lint today is not history. II e %                                                                                                                           Sure, you 're never broken
       have no glossy sense of per                                                                                                                                 a law in your life, 
the seed of vio
                                                                                                  who have nothing to lose or
       people knew that there were                                                                                                                                  lence, even if you have not
                                                                                                  to idealistic kids who never had
       some things you just didn t                                                                                                                                  planted it.
                                                                                                   to work anti then see llieir hard-
        do. Common sense, we called
                                                                                                  earned money dumped into
        it. II here is it now?
                                                                                                   taxes. "                                                             In our version o f democracy,
              "Those                        lousy politicians                                                                                                       we are not legally our brother's
        have gone too Jar. Sure, ev                                                                       “ You'd have to be insane                                keeper. The laws cannot con
        erybody's got to have his rights,                                                          to want tit kill such a wonderful                                trol our moral obligations.
        but some people are just                                                                  man. That's all, just insane. "
        plain lazy. Want everything                                                                                                                                     Hut we all must live in the re-
         handed to them on a platter.                                                                                                                              suit o f our inaction.
         I worked hard to be where I                                                                       “ I f I'd had the chance, I
        am. Why should I support                                                                   would have pulled the trigger
         these bums just because it                                                                myself. He's the one who start                                      I iole nee in the streets . . .
         will ivin votes f o r some crooked                                                       ed all this trouble we're in                                      Why? The answer is within
         senator?"                                                                                 right noiv."                                                    you.
                                                                                                                                                                               Apologia
                                                                                                                                                                   Unbelievable as it m ay
                                                                                                                                                                 seem, the Editors erred. The
                                                                                                                                                                 marvelous photo of the old
                                                                                                                                                                 man on the bench (page 8.
                                                                                                      PICTORIAL CREDITS                                          bottom, of last issue) was tak
D i r e c t o r ............................................. D a r id G ilb e r t
Executire E d it o r ................................MikeO Seal                      C o v e r ................................................... Jim Y ousling en by Jan Deen, Livonia jun
P o e try E d i t o r .............Jose/th D io n n e                                Sketch, page 3 ........................... # . Jim Y ousling
Photography Editor                                           Gordon \loore           Sketches, page 4 ......................... Shelley Sutton                   ior. not by Gordon Moore,
Jim hoisting. Don Olson. Put Lewis. Hruce                                            Headline, page 5 ...............................Jim Y ousling               Collage photography editor.
Sfiilz. Tom Howers. Hugh Low IIberl Drake.                                          •Sketch, page 5 .................................... Doug Huston
James Sherwood l ifilon. Shirley Echols.                                             Sketch, page 9                                            Shellev Sutton    The best laid plans . . .
P i c t o r i a l ..................................................... Hob Iv in s
                                                                                                                           T u esday, N ovem ber 26, 1968                   3
      One day in Dealey Plaza                                                                                       fabrications to prove-a point. Of the defense
  Don Olson is the Chairman of the MSU Chapter                                                                      books, the only one^to present any new in
  of the Kennedy Assassination Truth Com m ittee.                                                                   formation was "Sholfid We Now B elieve the
  An Honors College senior from Toledo, Ohio,                                                                       Warren Report?" byiGtephs?! White, a spokes
  Don has been researching and reading for                                                                          man for CBS News.
  this article for five months. His major is Phys                                                                        CBS NEWS inqui(v: The Warren Report
 ics.                                                                                                                     White s book p r i n t e d in detail the rea
                                                                                                                    soning and research Methods which went into
                   By DON OLSON
                                                                                                                    the production of thé-CBS News report on the
   The photographers had their cam eras trained
                                                                                                                    Warren Report. ShdVn on June 25-28, 1967.
on the President that bright fall day, as he
                                                                                                                    the four hour-long Specials w ere essentially,
enjoyed another warm reception along his
                                                                                                                    an answer to the critics, who by late 1966
current tour. Certainly none of the photo
                                                                                                                    had stirred up enough doubt so that 66 per
graphers could have imagined that their film s
                                                                                                                    cent of a Harris pol>Aample felt that Oswald
were to becom e valuable evidence in a P resi
                                                                                                                    had not acted a lo n e . CBS showed creditable
dential assassination which they were about
                                                                                                                    initiative in conduC ihg extensive tests of
to w itness. According to the official recon
                                                                                                                    rifle speed and acfc^acy. ¿ballistic penetra
struction of the shooting, that day the P resi
                                                                                                                     tion and the like.    .
dent fell, fatally wounded by two bullets fired
                                                                                                                         The number and iming of the shots is
from a cheap weapon bv a lone (and probably
                                                                                                                    essential to a stat^* ient of the number of
dem en ted ) assassin. In som e of the now-
                                                                                                                    gunmen, obviously.         Ts claim ed to have dis
important pictures, the face of the accused
                                                                                                                    covered clues in the ’ 'pruder film which could
assassin (him self soon to die in turn) ap
                                                                                                                     pinpoint the timing, if the shots. With the
peared clearly recognizable m om ents before
                                                                                                                     expert advice of LuK Alvarez ( a recent Nobel
the shots w ere fired. One of the photographers         "If anybody really wants to shoot the President              laureate in phvsic'j: from B erkeley), CBS
took a motion picture which depicted the                of the I ailed Slates. it is not a very difficult job—       thought it had locat 1 three shots in the film
events right up to the firing of the fatal shot.        all one has to do is gel on a high building some             and built their theo- about this finding. CBS
Partly because of the lack of definite ev i            day with a telescopic rifle." (President John F.             was justifiably acct ed of selectivity of evi
dence of a conspiracy and partly because the            Kennedy, the morning of November 22. 1963»                   dence here, for at. iea=t five other sim ilar
governm ent investigative agencies said they
                                                                                                                      points exist in the ^’lo which were not m en
noticed nothing in the film s which would
                                                        elusions were no surprise. The main con                      tioned on the shov The point becam e aca
lead to the existence of any fellow conspira
                                                        tribution of the com m ission beyond the as                  dem ic later, howev r. wfhen m ore careful re
tors. the lone assassin theory cam e to of
                                                        sem bling of evidence for the long demented                   search proved tHaC Alvarez' initial assump
ficial acceptance. Thus w as photographic ev i
                                                        assassin-cheap weapon-two shots hit theory                    tions w ere false am had been based on a lack
dence in use in coming to conclusions re
                                                        w as Counsel Arlen Specter's controversial                    of information.
garding the events which led to the execution
                                                        "single-bullet theory." One bullet w as theor                    Perhaps the m oït jpib itiou s undertaking
of Leon Czolgasz for the assassination of P resi                                                                     by CBS was a r^onifj-uction of the firing
dent McKinley on Sept. 6.1901.                          ized to have struck both Kennedy and Gover
                                                        nor Connallv. who was riding ahead of Ken                    site. A target w as f ille d at the proper average
   Sixtv-two years later the situation w as to re
                                                        nedy. and to have caused seven of the wounds                  speed down a trackJjefore a tower equi'ihlent
peat itself, with the nam es changed to Lee
                                                        noted in m edical reports. Careful study of the                to the sixth floor depository window alleged
Harvey Oswald and John F. Kennedy. Photo
                                                        fram es from the Zapruder film , along with                    to have been useS^by Oswald CBS used a
graphers were in abundance at D ealey Plaza
                                                        related evidence, had shown that anything                      ritle sim ilar to (7; Wald's, but with an im 
in D allas on Nov. 22. 1963: a recent book lists
                                                        but the single-bullet theory necessitated the                  portant functionaf-^lifference. According to
22. and there w ere several others. The m ost
                                                        existence of at least two gunmen.                              White the "voluntCir marksmen" often got
important of them was Abraham Zapruder.
                                                           The official findings received less than                    off two aim ed shq.2 at the moving target in
whose 8mm color m ovie captured the entire
                                                         unanimous acceptance. Initially prompted by                   less than two se'V'hds! Oswald's rifle had
assassination sequence. None of the photo
                                                         the unfair treatm ent given Oswald in the                     been shown to tak* - 2- 3 seconds just for work
graphers w as able to capture a clearly recog
                                                         press and electronic media (both of whom                      ing the bolt and ti-gger between shots, with
nizable picture of an assassin, however. Be
                                                         convicted Oswald within days of the a ssa s                  out including tirrx* for "'aiming at a moving
sides the photographs, governm ent agen cies
                                                         sination). various people took it upon them                  target. The split « r o n d s becom e crucial in
w ere able to assem ble a veritable mountain
                                                         selves to argue in the defense of Oswald.                     analysis when oneCVecalls that the entire as
of evidence relating to the assassination:
                                                           Particularly indefatigable w ere Mark Lane.                 sassination took p<£                !         ...
                                                                                                                                                       A
                      \ e w ) ork is (mix a group of
                 people, who, f o r their own rea
                  sons, are situated in close proxi
                  mity to each other. To see \ e i c
                   )o rk without studying carefully
                  the individuals who compose                                                                                                                             jp g
                  it is lit completely miss the fas                                                                                            i  v §r D
                  cinating subtleties that form the                                                                                          i        1 1 K
                                                                                                                                                                G it
                  basi sfo r that megalopolis.                                                              t t B t C
                       These photographs are the
                 product o f two days shooting,                                                         Or      B i'N 6
                  but to cover “ the City” in any                                                                lO tff               |    ,         0 U R
                 real depth             would require
                 months. Or perhaps a lifetime
                  would not suffice.                                                                             „ D U E 1-
                                                —Bob Ivins
                                                                                                                             Ki*'"      \
                                                                                                                                          9'
4   Michigan State News, E a s t L a n sin g , Michigan
           The Age of Beige’ blues                  can also bo a lot of excitem ent and wonder.            Our society reg im ents human beings and
                   B\ PAT LEWIS
                                                     U nfortunately, m any schools, especially tor       ignores their needs. Not just their physical
     There is nothing exciting tor kids to grow up
                                                    those who need them most, a r e really places        needs, but their emotional needs.
  to nothing but corporations and security, says
                                                    w here kids go to be bored, to be hassled about          Albert Einstein was a very independent
  Paul G oodman one ot our angry prophets And
                                                     their grades, and to be controlled                  person who knew what w as im portant to
  he is right America gets duller and duller
                                                       The problem, ot course, is bigger than money      him. When his wife died, tie was of course
     Ted Sorensen s speech several weeks ago at
                                                    or schools or space What we need is a new
  MSI was one symptom ot our problem The
                                                     leeling We need to c a r e about excitem ent
  quietness a mi resignation in his voice seemed
                                                    anti adventure We need to go som e w here and
  eerie and out ot place in a political speech
                                                    do something as a society, instead ot fighting
  Musth Ite urged the students who could to
                                                     Russians. Asians and South A m erican g u e r 
                                                    rillas to m ake the world sate tor the uptight
  than    the others   You    must   at least  vote 'loti s paradise we are tweating
                                                        We need to c a r e and to try ra th e r than to
                                                    del end Onlv it we stop being deluded by a r m s
                                                    rac es and the rat r a c e a r e we going lo be
                                                    a w a re ot the things we need and want, and
                                                    ttie things th.it really affect us Because the
                                                    trouble with the things we a r e supposed to
                                                    c a r e about is that they don t m a tte r
                                                       There is a film called Sixteen in Webster
                                                    G roves It is about high school juniors in a
                                                    wealthy conservative suburb of St Louis
                                                       They a r e dead-heads
                                                       They have em ptv faces and talk about
                                                    nothing but g rades and social position and
                                                    how thev would like to grow up and m ak e
                                                    money and have a nice house and security
                                                       Onlv twenty per cent ot them had skipped
                                                    school even once
                                                       These a r e the things, a s the movie goes on
                                                    to show, that they a r e told to ca re about by
                                                    their p are nts and teachers. However, the film 
                                                    m a k e rs also found the outcasts of Webster
                                                    G roves High School, the dids who didn't fit         very sad. One of his fellow scientists c a m e
                                                    These oddballs did have something of their           to see him and. to cheer him up. they spent
                                                    own to say. They w ere the intellectuals and         a few hours together on the harde st physics
                                                    the vocational training kids.                        problem s they could think of. When the other
                                                       It w as not cool to take a vocational ra th e r   m an was ready to leave. Albert Einstein was
                                                    than an a c ad e m ic course.                        very grateful to him. "T hank you." he said.
                                                       Those who did w ere considered "o u t of it.'"    " I t w as fun.”
                                                       But when som e of the kids who took m e ta l         He did not find com fort in the work he
                                                    working w ere interviewed, they said that no         loved m e re ly because he w as a genius. But
     Nixon. Humphrey. Wallace. There w as no        m a tte r w h at the other kids thought, w hat they  sim ply because he w as a hum an being.
  risk, no hope, no frankness or deep feeling
                                                    w ere doing w as not Mickey Mouse.                       But how m a n y people hate their jobs and
  about them, just safety, security, and fear.         "W e really w ork.” they protested. " W e 'r e    work for the money, eith er because they have
     Another exam ple: Congress has just ap        proud to look a t something w e built our           to. or because they don't c a r e enough to
  proved an enormous defense budget-$71.9 bil      selves."                                             change their jobs? (Or is it that they ju s t
  lion-setting still another all-tim e appropria
                                                       They a r e doing something im p o rta n t and     don't have the e n e r g y ? )
  tions record and getting it through alm ost with
                                                    something that they ca re about, but no one              Around 1962. on the lower east side of Man
  out a fight. However, the education bill is
                                                    can see that. (The w orst thing w as that it         hattan. the R eal Great Society got started.
  only 3.1 billion. And the space budget has
                                                    all rem inded m e of m y old high sc h o o l.)       A bunch of kids, m ostly former gang m em 
  been cut.                                         Why c a n 't w e »W re a l achievem ents, and        bers. got together and decided they wanted to
     It looks as though our representatives will
                                                    respect individuality?                               do som ething, and they are doing it. They
  act out of fear, but won't do much out of            T here is a good attitu d e in the space pro     have a U niversity of the Streets, where any
  hope, or out of concern, for people. Billions     gram . Schirra, " g r u m p y because of his cold. " one can com e in and teach anything, and
  for defense, but not much for a better country.   refused to prepare a television broadcast            anyone can just walk in and take any cla ss
  Our external enem ies are m ore real to our       aboard the Apollo 7 because the equipment he         th a t is offered, free. The gang m em bers
  congressm en      than    the internal, restless, had would not make a good enough quality             began by w riting down on a three-by-five
  searching, but potentially very stagnant so      film to satisfy him. Schirra's "I w on't” was        card: "What can I teach?” “ What would I
  ciety they pretend to be defending.               accepted without much question. Good. We             like to learn?” Anyone can now learn anv-
     Space is one of the few remaining refuges      must let people do their thing without bugging
   for restless imagination. In education there                                                                       (continued on page nine)
                                                    them.
                                                                                                           T uesday, F iv e m b e r 26, 1968                   5
                                                                                                         necessary contri         of     those students, the
                                                                                                         bureaucratic orgi ization and procedures es
                                                                                                         tablished to m e* this task and the subse
                                                                                                        quent use of com puters have led to an in
                                                                                                         teresting phenomenon - the statistics syn
                                                                                                        drome. The firS-^law of MSU human be
                                                                                                        havior states tKAgr if a concept of a thing
                                                                                                        cannot be object' sled. u does not exist. How
                                                                                                        can it? How wouf ‘ 'the bureaucrats be able to
                                                                                                        record it? How v gjld the computers be pro-
                                                                                                        gram m ed-’ Your^JJe. your sex. your major,
                                                                                                        your grades. youC parent's income: these are
                                                                                                        the onlv true fac- the onlv substantive mea-
                                                                                                        sure of a human Jeing. Our dorms are built
                                                                                                                            T9
                                                                                                        on the sand of - fpnomic returns, ounces of
                                                                                                        m eat per m eal ✓Id cubic feet per person.
                                                                                                        We are m easuri         i i term s of tim e units,
                                                                                                        subject units, c t , ‘Jit units and grade units.
                                                                                                         No one has eve/, j, -ccessfully explained to
                                                                                                        m e what 10 wet its of five credits of 3.0
   This article com pletes a three-part series on  and petty academ ic rituals has he adhered           grades of Russf          ,. of freedom, of lone-
plaid-clothed barkers softly mouthed. "We          form som eone that he has just undergone a           liness. of self? 1          teaches us that if they
C are!” and "We're glad to have you!" The          third standard deviation experience is m ean        exist, they can b fi -jd only in the m aterial
pam phleteer's pamphlet asserted that "though      ingless. Our lives are assvm etrical. Unlike the     and productively •P* ational world. All sub-
this is not the best. YOU are partaking in an      Donna Reed Show, we do not exist in tight           jective connotatio ■8 i e banished to the back-
explosive, dynam ic, approaching-the-best insti   ly packaged serials of love, crises and happy        w aters of our mit S I decay into unobtrusive
tution.” The bull horns belched directions. The                                                         sedim ent. To stit til i sedim ent is to ques-
                                                   conclusions. Your relatives do not die every
chorus tumbled across green m ats and scream      week nor do you get married every monjh We           tion who you ar* 71 at question is far too
ed. "State is G reat!” Toilet paper w as thrown    walk along roads of varying intensities: ecsta      dangerous for far k) ¡any of us. Never taught
from the upper tiers. And I would fall into        tic then m iserable, confused than om niscient,      to think or be i: ro jective. we would col-
line and prepare m yself for the next act.         active then bored. Much like the hanging scrolls     lapse; better th£ J>1, ¡tic w aters of a plas-
   But is has been three years. I'm tired of the   of the Orient, sections of our lives are finely      tic world.          , s
preparations. The shows have lost their m ean     detailed, others sketchy and still others blank.                   Vanif 1 jt/G eshtalt
ing. The vitality that I brought as a freshman      At tim es we full the scroll. At tim es w e shriv     Students are a ;r of the pressure under
has dissipated into w eariness. To try to find     el and hide in one of the corners. Conflict          which the facul*        • jsts: the necessity to
out why is to reopen doors to now fam iliar        arises when a rigid structured system is su         publish, the adv ft* ’s accrued from for-
closets. This article allow s the public airing of  perimposed over the irregularity, the assv-         eign studies, th* w ,-k in com m ittees and
five of these closets.                              m etrv of our existence. MSU is such a sys         som etim es, the • si . to be within a com-
               Structure Suffocation                tem. It throbs with precision and dependabil       petent depaYtme-           ,-id to be an excellent
   The fram e of a car. the bones of our bodies.    ity. Enrollment is the acceptance of the ten        teacher. Let m e et personal about it. You.
The steel beam s of a skyscraper. We usually       week period of production, the five week de         the faculty, as X to iers and as men of ex-
envision a skeleton as a structure, a support      m arcation 'of cross-exam ination and the one        cellence in 'one n rrowed field of knowledge.
 network designed to contain and protect a much    week interim of collapse. tMSU. The green            are hindered seve >ly by the contained quality
 more viable and vital system . It is not the      and     white     merry-go-round. The constant       of your involverrt ¡V Erom that precipice of
 fram e that is of prim e im portance but the con straining for gold rings. The uneasy vertigo of      specialization, vo ^ tl! never be able to help
 tent which it securely encases. It is the proper  perpetual motion.                                    this urban comj. V St tain or actualize the
 function and operation of the organism that is        However, if you succumb to system fatigue,       full potential th g 1' exhibits.: rather your
 the essen ce of the skeletal existence. Alarm     if you start to tire and break your vows, if        approach will p * ly worsen the present
 ingly enough, that situation has been reversed     your own life suddenly spills like milk on          situation.         r
 at MSU.                                            concrete, if parental pressure and the draft           For exam ple,           ¡rolled in a cla ss last
    When I ask an upperclassman how many           are insufficient to keep you here: you qan           spring - IDC 3Ç ’         was a lecture series on
 good courses he has taken since he has been        hand in your ticket. You can walk away from         Africa. The mat           w as valid. The speakers
 here, courses that he considered to have been      the carnival m usic and the garbled roar of         were good. The            •hts were initially inter-
 enlightening, he usually replies between two       40.060. You can leave, if you know where to         ested. The clash            a flop. A fourth factor
 and four. And yet. how many lectures has he                                                            overwhelm ed the.            The lectures took p la ce
                                                    go and how to get there.
 attended, how many exam s has he taken, how                     T to S ta tis tic s S v * r > i r
 manv papers has he written, how many inane            The   tremendous        student enrollm ent, the            tcewthf        «page twelve)
6 M ichigan S tate News, E a s t L a n s in g , Michigan
       L IN E S F O R t t O S S , T W O                                                                                        POETRY
                                                       V iv e s
                                                                                                        today
   UNES                               ¿ V r td v o w           Vo xne»wv.>v^
                                                                                                        I w ill
                            ■jAX    oS   «¿o«- W A A s                                                  w rite a
                    &         Qrv   I k t ec o v tew                   0'
                                                                                                        bout P
                           CURVES                                                                              a
                                                                                                               t
                                                               c>                 ^                            i (w aiting)
                                                                * ^ SC ^
                                                                                                               e
                     &
                                                                                                               n  waiting
                                                                                      o
                                                                                                               c
              ARE     CRCf l TP D       BY         G C ^ e r iC          CHANCE                                e  waiting
                     UNCO NSC IO U S              OF FORM
                      YfcT ft MATHEMATICAL                                PRÉCISION
                      ,S     566N         .« EN D LÉSS                     R E P E T IT IO *                     -James Sherwood Tipton
            * * ♦ *
                                , . HC |UT e R5 t c n o N                 of     PARTS                                 E X T IN C T IO N
      B E f ì i U T ’Y      I S   ft   P f t R f t f t O '- f t            ft RCHf 5
                                                                                                                       E X T IN C T IO N
                  v A u <.>                             Ifv                             A R C*
                                                                                                                       E X T IN C T IO N
                                                                         Li                                            E X T IN C T IO N
        t h e r e f o r e      -                                                                                       E X T IN C T IO N
         YOUR BERUTY                    IS       CURVES                                                                E X T IN C T IO N
                                     n ev er
                                                        0                                                              E X T IN C T IO N
                                                          B U i
                                                                                                                       E X T IN C T IO N
        KEVÉR                                                           u.
                                                                           E OR DcVl                                   E X T IN C T IO N
                                        t*»'ffcVv        s t r a it , tv                           t/S                 E X T IN C T IO N
        OR       S T IF F E N                                                                    o
                                                                                                                       E X T N C T ON
        BUT      EVERYW HERE                                      WI T H         THE
                                                                                                                       E X T N C T ON
        ^                            pA               OF         COMCE.RN
                                                                                                                       E X T N C T ON
                                                                                                                       EX     N C T ON
                                                                            --Albert Drake                             EX     NC ON
                                                                     First printed in West Coast Review
                                                                                                                       EX     NC ON
                                                                                                                       EX      NC 0
                    post-impressionism success                                                                         EX       C 0
     m anet m anet manet                               monet monet monet                                               EX       c 0
           m anet m anet                                       monet monet                                             EX       c
                                        money                                                                          EX       c
     monet monet monet                                 m anet m anet manet                                             EX       c
           monet monet                                        m anet m anet                                            EX
                                                                     --A lbert D rake                                                --A lbert D rake
                                                                                                 T u esd ay , N ovem ber               . 1968
                           no eSCape
blooming flower
                                                                      T H E                       0                               P
                  among         dieing          ones
a
yen to breath
                                                                                                  L                                f t
                  suffercated      by       surrounding
a
   Well
      To
        Spread
                                                                                                  D                               I
                    block     by     dis . . . ease
thats choking his sphere
A
heckoning
               to
                                                                      V I E T                                N A T
                    out grow
                         the         parentical atm osphere
Yet
                                                                       I
the
   not recognizing
Cold
      the direction to        HEAD?
                                                                                                  S
Wind
Knocking
        Blows
                  through the dry vacant path
                 the leaves             fa rth e r  than      BEFORE?
                                                                      C                          T
in
the
   di
                                                                                                                                     i
rec
tionof       infinity,          Scream ing         n ow ithness       T                          0              R
to the flower where abouts                                  /
blown
a way                                                                                                          " S te p h e n Hi      vay
with
 the
 swirling
w i n d s
                                      -S h irley Echols
                                                                         EDITOR’S NOTE: An attem pt to justify this
                                                                         form of poetry would only develop into a ramb
                                                                         ling discourse of sem antics. Suffice it to say
                                                                         then (cop-out) that the POEMS which appear
                       r      r       r         r                        on these pages have, in a sense, transcended
                       a      a      a          a                        the dimensions of fam iliar descriptive rela
                                                                         tions. They have in fact founded their own
                       i      i       i         i                        dimensions through the device of m ixing m e
                      n       n      n          n                        dia. Some, like Albert D rake’s, “post-im pres
                                                                         sionism su ccess,” have becom e pure SOUND-
             treestreestreestreestrees                                   SCAPES. Others, like Stephen Hathaway's,
                                                                         sw astica creation, and Albert D rake’s, “ Lines
                     (r      (r      (r (r                               For Moss, TWO,” have bombarded our senses
                      a       a       a        a                         from so many directions that they have becom e
                      i       i        i        i                        WORDART LANDSCAPES. The rest of the
                                                                         poem s offered here, for the m ost part, use a
                     n)       n)      n) n)                              sight-device technique to illustrate a single
                                                                         thought or scene.
                                  --James Sherwood Tipton
                                                                                                                               T. V iW .'-“
                                                                                                                                 Ä
                                                                                                                                     Am*'«-
                                                                                                                                 -A. ft*,«“
8 Michigan State News, E a s t L an sin g , Michigan
  Renaissance in education?
                   By TOM BOWERS                         something he was searching for. Forni c a m e          grad u a te can hardly en ter a professional field
      " I ' m happy h ere .” E nrico Forni re m a rk s   to the U n it e d States to do r e s e a r c h on the  without on-the-job training. A m erican e d u c a
  to his class as he leans back in his c h a ir          philosophy of history. But a year of p a r ti         tion does r e l a t e life and scholarship and. to
  and breaks into that w arm , slightly self-con        cipation in American higher education had a            Forni. this is w hat has m ade Am erica rich
  scious grin - of a person confessing a p e r          profound effect on this m an who had been             and powerful.
  sonal truth. He m eans it His whole face is            bored in the atm o sp h e re of a E uropean uni           "But education must not be a tool of so
  smiling. Then th e re is a pause ot perhaps            versity. Something about the openess of                ciety." P'orni warns. E d u c a t i o n should ef
  half a second as his eyebrows and forehead             A m erican education first im pressed him.             fect its environm ent, not be controlled by it.
  give a fleeting hint of frustration. The smile         Soon the whole concept of the A merican ed u          P’orni finds a m a jo r s h o r t c o m i n g in the
  covers a vaguely helpless gesture ot his hand          cational system began to fascinate Forni.              A m erican system to be a tendency to m a k e
  when he adds: " i ' m not ready to go home             He forgot his rese arch and began to study            education subservient to society. He consid
      Enrico Forni is a n I t a li a n , a visiting pro the e d u c a t i o n a l concepts he saw and was     e r s the idea of a board of tru ste es to be a
  fessor a t MSI . He is on leave from the U n i        experiencing.                                         sign of this m a jo r flaw. E d u c a t i o n should be
   versity of Bologna in northern Italy. Bologna            The connection in America between life             run by specialists, he says, "not by Fiona Id
  is . the oldest nontheologieal university in           and scholarship is a key to his interest. “ In         Reagans and gas station owners sitting on the
  E urope and has a long heritage of traditions.         America every activity of life is studied and         board of tr u ste e s.”
  The heritage is nice, but a few y e a rs ago           taught," he says in a tone which betrays                  R egardless of its shortcomings. A m erican
  Forni began to get restless under the tra d i         admiration.                                           education provides a model which the m o re
  tions. Italian higher education seem ed to                When P'orni begins to talk about education,        rigid E uropean system s ought to study. Forni
  him to be missing something to be too tied             he sounds excited. As the discussion goes             says. This is w hat m otivates him righ t now
  down, to be alm ost Irrelevant. " I w as b ored.”      deeper his conversation gets faste r and              and he is w riting about A m erican education in
  he says, "a n d I wanted to get out and see            he forgets to put a question m a rk in his voice      an effort to influence the educational system
  something else. I was m ad because I know              each tim e he uses a word from his English            of Italy and the rest of w estern Europe. E u 
   there m ust be something m ore but I couldn't         reading vocabulary. The becomes =«• and               ropean universities fail to function in society.
  get it at Bologna.” So he decided to go abroad         sn m eih iu g becom es isomeziiif!. but the ideas     F orni em phasizes, and he hopes his article s
   Ignoring his apprehensions, he c a m e to the         com e through clearly anyway. He has ob              and the book he is writing will help prod the
   United S tates in the s u m m e r of 1967 and spent   viously thought a g rea t deal about w hat he         Italian ac a d e m ic com m unity into a m o re pro
   the first confusing months at MSU. He was             likes and dislikes in education.                      gressive attitude.
   terrified, he adm its, especially because he             “ Public education is a public service.               "My aim is a political on e,” Forni says
   was obliged to speak English. With laughter           Therefore it must be a function of so ciety ,”        earnestly. “ This study is not just academ ic.
   that com es only from regained confidence,            Forni has written. Education fits properly            I want to effect som e change.”
   he describes the anxious m inutes he spent            into society by teaching people to function«             Forni. who holds a doctoral d eg re e in
   circling Morrill Hall to build up courage for         in society. Students in A m erica learn how to        theoretical philosophy, is the equivalent of
   his first encounter with the c h a irm an of MSU's    perform in life. An engineering student is            an associate professor at Bologna. At MSU he
   Philosophy Dept. In the fall of 1967 he went to       ready to go to work when he finishes his edu         teaches history of philosophy. He s e em s am used
   teach a t San F rancisco State College, still         cation. and a journalism m a jo r is taught to        at the difficulty A merican students supposedly
   scared, and sti 11 unsure of w hat he wanted.         w rite for a real newspaper. Forni finds E u         have in making 8 o'clock classes. 8 o'clock
       When Forni returned to MSU's Philosophy           ropean education too ac a d e m ic and too sep       is not early to me. he says, but the class is
   Dept, in the fall of this year, he had a new          a ra te d from real life. P ro g r a m s em phasize   alw ays sleepy. "M a y b e .” he suggests with an
   outlook on things. For one thing, he could at         things like law and humanities. If you study          assum ed expression of one giving inside in
    last speak good English without undue strain.        medicine. Forni r e m a rk s , you don't learn        formation. " m a v b e philosophy is too dull to
    But much m o re im portant, he had found             how to work in a hospital. An Italian college         teach at 8 a . m . ”
              C re a tiv e P e o p le O f T h e W o r ld , S u b m it!
                                   . . . S u b m it y o u r i d e a s , p o e m s , s t o r i e s , a r t i c l e s , e t
                                   a l, to C o lla g e . W e a r e n o w a c c e p t i n g m a t e r i a l fo r
                                   n e x t t e r m ’s i s s u e s . I f y o u a r e a l i v e , i m a g i n a t i v e ,
                                   a n d r e a d y fo r a c h a l l e n g e , C o lla g e i s fo r y o u .
                                   W e a r e s till a t th e S ta te N e w s o ffic e , S u n d ay
                                   th r o u g h T h u r s d a y a f t e r n o o n s .
                                                                                                                T u esd ay , Novem b                6, 1968     Ç
                                                                                                                                           &-
       Assassin? O r Assassin i?
                (continued from page three)          had been correct in stating that he had been          surem ents. Thompson proved "vj, many peo
      In the final analysis after tests like these.  struck by the second bullet, different from           ple had noticed already. I iq .-J that the
  CBS essentially agreed with the Warren Com        the one which had already struck the P resi          fatal shot drive the Presiden; ) j -ty violently
  m ission. with som e sm all variations in the      dent at this point. The explanation for this          back and to the left, slamri n„' ^m against
  story. The public at that point could hardly       belated noticing of evidence lies at least            the back of the seat. Th*                   made a
  be blamed for being in confusion. An under        partly in the inferior quality of the film            detailed analysis of the situ tier irr* light of
  standable opinion w as that the          questions used by the FBI for the com m ission; it was          w itness testim ony and m edi1         yfdenee and
  w ere unresolvable and one might as w ell be      a copy of a copy. Life still has the originals        other possible explanations ‘or nstance, he
   lieve whom ever one liked.                        today. At the       crucial  point in the film        showed that the car did * '* c>iddenly ac
                  Six seconds in Dallas               (fram es 234-238) Comm issioner Allen Dulles         celerate at this point). He W*A 1 ^ to the con
      Fortunately at this point objectivity en      asked the FBI expert if the 'jerky motion             clusion that Mark Lane’s U                hypothesis
   tered the scene in the person of .Josiah Thomp    in Connallv" w as a motion in Connally or            of a gunman on the grassy f boil which lies
   son of Haverford College. Having concluded         a jerk in the film; the FBI expert could only        to the right front of the m otorcade route, is
   that the Warren Report left much to be de         reply "You can't tell." I spent a full day of        indeed confirmed by the evidence. My study
   sired. but noticing that nriost criticism had      my tim e at the National Archives in Wash           of this portion of the film , in light of the
   been only destructive. Thompson attacked the       ington studying the Zapruder film fram es and        physics of conservation of momentum, led m e
   problem: If the Warren Commission had              paying particular attention to the governor.         to feel that if anything © ¿¡tip son under
   erred, was it possible to determ ine what          The clearest wav to separte the motions              stated his case. On this p£»w Counsel Lie-
   really had happened in D ealey Plaza? Work        proved to be this; using two projectors. I           beler could only say o f th« official analysis
   ing as much as possible from primary sources.      superimposed nearby fram es (in this case 236        of the film , "It’s only sine’s.The critics have
   Thompson studied the ease for over a year          and 238) on the sam e screen in such a way           raised this point that anybody has ever looked
   before publishing his results. On the basis         that the fixed parts of the car (window sill,       at it closely."
   of detailed photographic analysis iusing en        door handle i remained stationary when we
                                                       flipped back and forth between the fram es.             While Thompson’s book. Uke all others, is
    largem ents.     dissecting   m icroscopes, pro
                                                       The m otions then observed in Connally - the                                            H
    tractors and optical scales wherever appli                                                             elusions appear w ell-rea so n tl however, they
    cab le' and the consideration and organiza        20 degree shoulder drop, the puffing of his
                                                       cheeks, the disarrangem ent of his hair. etc. -      flatly contradict the comr       , on findings of
    tion of evidence glossed over or not known to                                                           a lone assassin To briefly su- <- i.irize for a no
    the Warren Commission. Thompson arrived            w ere quite obvious when brought out in this
                                                       way. In light of the related testim ony and          doubt confused reader, Thor*       >n feels that in
    at several conclusions which contradicted com                                                          a period of about six secort*- . hree assassins
    m ission findings.                                 evidence, the logic of the case necessiated
                                                       an additional assassin to the rear of the            fired a total of four shots^c ..ee hitting the
       Besides a large number of statem ents cor
                                                       motorcade                                            President and one hitting          governor. The
    recting persistent m istakes in analysis of the
                                                          Thompson's other major contribution lay in        question naturally com es . pmd how the
    film s. Thompson m ade two major contribu
                                                       studying the motions of the President's head         other assassins      escaped           com m ission
    tions Acting as consultant for Life m aga                                                              analysis and who they m ight- -
    zine. he studied the clear Life blow-ups of the    after the fatal shot, which visibly explodes                                       **
    Zapruder film and for the first tim e saw          the right side of the President's head at
    enough evidence to prove that Gov Connallv         fram e 313. By making extrem ely careful m ea                  (continued on page^Velve)
                                                                                                                                       §
                    Decide Before It s Too Lete
             (continued from page four)
                                                                                                         it is disastrous to ignore our           It som e
                                                                                                       thing really hurts us. but no ■> .         Ueves it
thing from acting to accounting They just                                                              is an important thing, then w' be           tn e con
got a $70.000 grant (ask and you shall re                                                             fused and torn apart inside W'*ar           feprived
ceive».                                                                                                even of sim ple sadness
  There was a sort of im m ediacy about them.
                                                                                                          If som ething^ is     important, t»      us em o
They had figured out a way to help save a                                                              tionally. but we don't realize i inti       ectually,
poverty problem in a sm all town on Long                                                               we are likely to ignore it. and o o         to som e
Island, and were ready to carry it out before                                                          thing which w e think w e sh< Id            ant. but
the conventional people had decently pulled                                                            which leaves us empty.
over and digested the fact that things were
                                                                                                          A society's people need to , >ve        rneaning-
bad in that little town. (But never mind, con
                                                                                                       ful goals in common, or the           be   hne lost
ventional people, speed is not the m ost im 
                                                     venture and curiosity, with the need to make      and confused. When you thin! soi            thing is
portant thing. The m ost important thing is          a real contribution to human beings rather        exciting and important, but no ne            se does,
that w e realize w e can do som eth in g.)           than just to make money, with the need to         you becom e a lonely person ' her            ou need
   No one seem s to realize the im portance of       feel that the things around us are part of us     something, but no one else se€* -it           a need,
the goals that humanly m atter, at least not         (even cooking our own food helps in this          including yourself, you becom e 3         ‘¿rson
those who are in power. Many of the needs            respect, i and with the need to feel w e can         We live in a society where f ist       >f us will
w e m inim ize are more important than we            do som ething that m akes a difference. We        be lost and in which people w i^ rg.      irage and
think. We are restless with the need for ad         need to feel alive.                               im agination are going to be very, »er     lonely
10   Michigan State News, E a s t L an sin g , Michigan
Word-plastics: new graphics
                                                         parts of speech ("sujet." "verbe." "sufixe").           a's. u s. e's, x s. etc. Here the typewriter be
                      By HUGH FOX                                                                                com es a substitute for a pencil or brush-but
      Hugh Fox is a professor of ATL at MSU. He          are given. R eality has been totally subjugated
                                                         to the word. The linear abstract word-world has         there is no relationship between Garnier's
   is editor of the “ International Quarterly of E x                                                            "drawings" and words as "thought-vehieles."
   perimental P oetry.”                                  taken over. Again "com m u nication " using
                                                         words as graphic, plastic symbols.                      Technically, though, in term s of presentation.
                                                                                                                 Garnier's work does not approach that of Bory
      First a little name-dropping. J.F . Borv ("Ap                                                             or Carrega. Bory and Carrega are technically
   proches“ !. Ugo Carrega ("Tool“ ). P ierre Gar-         Ugo Carrega in Milan looks at language in a
                                                                                                                 "slick. " neat, hold to a firm hard line and
   nier. Martino Oberto ("Ana E ccetera” ). Waliv       way verv sim ilar to J.F . Borv—only even m ore in       highly refined surface, whereas the work of
   Depews. Dick Higgins ("Something E lse               term s of a TOTAL plastic expression. Carrega            Garnier is flaccid, often am ateurish. The plas
   P ress" ).                                           is interested in:                                        tic manipulation of word-structures demands
      Now som e explaining. The above are the                    the world of verbal-phonetic signs              precision and technical m astery.
   nam es of poet-experim entalists who no longer                i of the words apart from their m ean             Although at first glance som e of the work of
   try to use words to com m unicate as thought-                 ing or sound >and the world of grap
                                                                                                                 Martino Oberto (a friend of Ugo Carrego si
   svmbol units but. rather, avoiding lineal, tvpe-              hic signs (their physical appearance,
                                                                                                                 seem s m erely an extension of Carrego s "scrit-
   age "m eaning." try to use words as a plastic                 the "m atter" of the word on the
                                                                                                                 tura sim biotica" (sym biotic writing) it is really
   matrix to be moulded and manipulated to give                  p a g e .»                                      much m ore am bitious. Oberto describes the
   im m ediate, plastic effects. J.F . Bory. the editor  (¡1 nutmln tlt'l scgni it'thitjnnc11(i (tlclltt /turnlr
                                                                                                                 purpose of his m agazine Ana E tcetera as:
   of Approches, for exam ple, in his "Hiroshima"        ncl lorn significant c stutntt) *’ i/ nutmht tlci               the operational aw areness (ceccato)
   begins with a dot-size word-conglomerate that         scgni grnfici (VnsftvHtt fisica. nittlcritilc ilclht            of the specific exercise of linguistic
   expands outward toward the reader as he turns        /ttirttlit tiulJitglitt.)
   the pages, until finally the conglom erate m oves
   off the page and the reader's eye is led into
                                                            In his work "Segno Vita." for exam ple, a
   space and then blackness. The im age literally
                                                         multi-limbed red design is projected on a bright
   explodes toward the reader. Fear is com m un
                                                         orange surface and words skate along the edges
   icated by words without using them «* thought-
                                                         of three of the six limbs. His "Rossa esser-
   svmbols. In another poem of Bory s. "Saga."
                                                         iale" is composed of a straight line at the top
   using the two words “On Va” he attem pts a
                                                         of the page (“ non principio e fine,” written
                                                         under it) followed by what look like drawings
                                                         of neurons with text (“ governa ma (’ultimo
                                                         iatto:ora” ) placed contrapuntally along the
                                                         edges, followed by m ore text (e dal com ples-
                                                         so, enorm e agita l’universo), a sm all, black,
                                                         red-centered circle, m ore text (seeondo gli An
                                                         tichi), a black and white Yin-Yan symbol. The
                                                         text as "idea-vehicle." though, is totally sub
                                                         ordinated to the visual-emotional effect of the
                                                         word-drawing com plex as design on the page.
                                                            The works of other poets that Carrega pub
                                                         lishes in Tool often approach Pop Art. This is
                                                         especially true of Alviani s black and yellow
                                                          squares-w it Inn-squares. I.uigi Ferro s com plex
                                                         geom etric figure m ade out ol black L s and
                                                          red R s. or Maurizio Spatola's Intercromatico"
                                                                                                                        term s, integrative levels for a type
                                                          com posed of a red-lined parallelogram in the
                                                                                                                        of language programmed to the phil
                                                          middle of a "field" of parallel black lin e s -
                                                                                                                        osophical abstractism (verbaliza
                                                          all in Tool No. 6. At tim es Carrega returns to
                                                                                                                        tions taking as a model the opera-
                                                          more conventional word-sound-meaning play as
                                                                                                                        tion-sense in the language-gam e
                                                          in his "Ti M Mare" where he uses "m are "
                                                                                                                        i with Wittgenstein ). synoptical w rit
                                                          isea ' to evoke ' un uomo a mare" 'a man
                                                                                                                         ing as serial montage, transcriptions,
                                                          at sea ', but most recently he has shown a
                                                                                                                         graphic sem antics, anamorphosis
                                                          marked trend toward total visualization
     kind ol history of communication. First the                                                                         and a new extraction of the term (ab
                                                             Pierre Garnier. especially interested in "spa-
     ON VA'S 1111 the page like back columns or                                                                          stract I. from the esserialism to the
                                                          cia iism ” (spatialism e) and concrete poetry, a l
     pillars and a sm all figure stares out from be                                                                       thought by machine.' in the intention
                                                          though he often does silk-screen art work td Depew are rare
tion of "sem -graphics." a black spot followed                                                                            birds on the U.S. poetry see e, and except for
by its analytical equivalent (“ a definite form-                                                                          them and a few others the *-illy equivalents oi
elem ent" >, its "association" (“ soleil noir”-                                                                           the contemporary European -Joetry experim en
black sunt, then its analogical equivalent (‘‘un                                                                           tation in the United States Jre in poster art.
trou sans contour a la surface du vide” —a                                                                                record covers, experiment?* film s and som e
cavity without contour on the surface of em p                                                                            rock groups . . . nil of .. n f > have in comm' >
tiness i. A white spot in the middle of a red                                                                              the conveyance’ of ’.rot.-; through “ direc.
square becom es an "indefinite elem ent of                                                                                 rather than “ indirect        t wee stage) sensory ir.
form .” a “ mer rouge” (red seat, whose equiv           Service de la Revolution (No. 5) are two poenhs                   pact.
alent analogue is "air becoming the recipient            by G iacom etti combining faces, spaces and                           In a recent letter to n. . Ih ' Higgins oi
of a neutral form containing a neutral form .”           words, others by Michel Leiris that are very                      Something E lse P ress, the (fev.        nnortant pub
   Here conventional language is viewed as an            rem iniscent of Pierre Garnier's “ letter-pic-                    lishing center of nvnnt-ganfe 'n. . rial:- in tf
impediment to total com m unication and a new            tures.” On the other hand Kurt Schwitters'                        United States, and an impi'-rtarH no »r
word-graphics combination is sought, that will           own literary invention “M erzism" w as a liter                   European mani-garde w orkfi^riths:
"get behind” language to " reality.” Oberto does         ary equivalent of random collage-work, and al
not seem to belong in the sam e category as               though it lacked the total plastic orientation of a                       . . . we are taught to th-nk that there
his friend Carrega (or Borv and G am ier), but           G iacom etti or Leiris. it does point toward a de                        is something pecuharl' ico n o cla stic
in fact all these poets have in common an in            finite elim ination of "m eaning” as the ruison                           and verve-full in Ami rican avant-
terest in transcending language and moving               d'etre of poetry:                                                         garde work: actually f -sn t so. What
toward a Heideggerian confrontation with "Ex-                                                                                      happens in Providenay#R I in 1968
istenz.” Also, it is important to note here that                                                                                   becom es known in Nev-. York in 1969.
they are only rem otely related to that E.E.                              By ALBERT DRAKE                                          and throughout the vij fid in 1970—
Cummings-A.L. G illespie attem pt to "explode”                                                                                     especially in Madrid, ¿jondon, N ice,
or "resensitize” language to approximate im 
                                                         GHOST O-t.XCE Vo. 2 (llugli                 fo x , E d ito r,
                                                                                                                                   Prague, Berlin. Dusse 4orf. Milano
m ediate. in-life language situations, although
                                                         lif/ti. of I I I.. MSI ), 3 ! />/».. "■>(.                                and Frankfurt, wherd’ s where the
Oberto. the m ost sem antically, meaning-orient                                                                                   action is (Tokyo seem /' jo have slow 
                                                         The ghost begins to dance in E ast Lansing,                               ed dow n ).                 \
ed of the group, does, in a sense approach Gil
lespie's program of returning to "the original              but its shim m ering steps w ill be seen
                                                            from afar. Its editor, Hugh Fox, m ight call                       Higgins’ big m istake her»» I think, is to fail
flashsearConsciousness QUANTITY of Im ages,
                                                            it a mindblast. What he does call it is: The                   to recognize where the acj *)n is in U.S. art—
that polvgonating Im pact-series of the was-as-
                                                            International Quarterly of Experim ental                       in the young rock groups, pi, ter m akers, cloth
pected Ideation.” (Transition, 12. March. 1928.
                                                             Poetry, and its policy is “ To save the print                es designers, interior decoi tors, folk singers,
P. 173).
                                                             ed word from obsolescence by stretching it
   The origins of this contemporary experim en                                                                            ballet dancers and in som e- erv alive contem 
 tation extend back to the experim ental clim ate            into the media-revolution now-world.”                         porary U.S. playwrights, f (nds like those of
of Europe at the beginning of the 20th century.                                                                            Ann Halprin, the director qf 'Ae Dancer's Work
                                                         Or: W
 In the 1910 "Futurist Painting: Technical Man                                                                            shop in San Francisco, or L* playwright Allan
                                                             OKU m eans lineal button-down SEQl I. \ ( f.
ifesto” of Boccioni. Carra. Russoio. Ball and                                                                               Kaprow, think primarily ►% trm s of "plastic
Severini w e find a declaration on painting that               and what is desired is       II.I. (TOXCEXESS                im pact.” European "plasli'~ ' poetry borrows
applies just as w ell to poetry: " . . . all sub                                                                           freely from dance, painting- Sculpture, plavwrit-
                                                         Although there are poem s here that are linear
jects previously used m ust be swept aside in                                                                               ing and media becom e i*» ’ed .” the compart
                                                             and frankly sequential, the em phasis is on
order to express our whirling life of steel, of                                                                             m ents between genres arts em oved. Complet
                                                             experim ental poetry which, in one way or
 pride, of fever and of speed. In Tristan Tzara s                                                                           ely “ non-academ ic” art-ac' sities—I'm thinking
                                                             another, breaks' out of traditional fram es—
 "Dada M anifesto” (1918»the anti-traditional pro                                                                          of rock groups like the El* trie Prunes or the
                                                             such as Jean-Francois Bory's Hiroshima,
 gram becom es even m ore far-reaching: "I am                                                                               Grateful D ead-how ever. ~(f five out of classifi
                                                             where words and letters sw irl on the page,
against system s, the m ost acceptable system is                                                                            cation and categorization ? ’ cross— and inter -
                                                             and the next page, and the next, each tim e
 on principle to have none . . . I detest greasy                                                                            genre patterns much as Eu,.'pean poets do.
                                                             moving closer until the reader really is "in
 objectivity and harmony, the science that finds                                                                                Just how "traditional” Aiost U.S. poetry is
                                                             volved.”
 everything in order.” In his 1934 "What is Sur                                                                             cam e home rather force' illy the other night
                                                         Other poem s are catalogues, visually manipu
 re a lism ’.” looking'back to the earlier battles                                                                           when a poet-friend of.mint said: “Robert Frost
                                                             lated verbal pictures, concretes, etc. There
 gained by the surrealist revolution, Andre Bre                                                                             claim s that w ritrig verse ithout rhym e is like
                                                             are also translations of Heinrich Boll from
 ton w rites: "Surrealism . . . w as securing ex                                                                            playing tennis without a i t . . . but I do it all
                                                             the German, of Manuel Santos from the Spa
 pression in all its purity and force. The free                                                                             the tim e." He w as apoleg Tic and seem ed hap
                                                             nish, of Carrega from the Italian, etc.
 dom it possesses is a perfect freedom in the                                                                                pily unaware of the “f( elutions" of Dada,
                                                              And for a real m indblast, try reading som e of
 sense that it recognizes no lim itations exterior                                                                           Surrealism, Merzism, Fut- n sm and all the other
                                                             these poem s aloud.
 to itself.”                                                                                                                 "ism s” which should hav had som e influence
    Most of the "experim ental” contemporary                                                                                 on the United States, but* which, for the m ost
 poetry is directly descended from this ferm ent                                                                             part, have been nil. Ano tier statem ent from
 of activity in the period between 1905 and                       Stagger.                                                   the Higgins letter quoted a ove. though, at least
 1935.                                                            Rainworms.                                                 shows the direction tha the U.S.               thought
    In the surrealist m agazine La Surrealism e an                Fishes.                                                    should take:
                                                                  Fishes.
                                                                  Clocks.                                                               . . . I suppose the’ answer is that
                                                                  The cow.                                                            w e are trying to rea-ly BELONG to
                    V                                  E          The woodland leafs through the leaves.
                                                                   A drop of asphalt in the snow.
                                                                                                                                      the Global V illa g e . / We don’t care
                                                                                                                                      much for the m ore ypical U.S. at
                                                                   Cry. cry, cry, cry, cry.                                           titude that ' ‘so wha if it happened
               A E                            R                    A w ise man explodes without payment.
                                                              Some criticis like Matthew Josephson saw
                                                                                                                                      in Stuttgart or Rom* if it hasn't hap
                                                                                                                                      pened in New Yorfc -t hasn't really
                                                           that the American Billboard Culture (later to                              happened.
                 ■            N          U                 becom e Pop A ^ nicely combined meaning
                                                           (the sell) and y a p h ic s (the design), but for
                                                           the m ost part the furthest that U.S. poets went
                                                                                                                                 One can only hope thijt som e of the plastic
                                                                                                                             energy of other U.S. aft?Adrms can be som e
                u                   T
                                                           w as in the direction of Cummings-esque or                         how transferred into U,S poetry at the sam e
                                                           Poundian word-puzzles. just as today in the                        tim e that the hoped-for*, global village com es
                                                           United States m ost of our furthest out poetic                     closer to becoming m ore of an im m ediate real
                                                           experim entalists like Vito Hannibal Acconci or                    ity-
                 i             C                           Aram Sareyan are not so much experim entalists
                                                           as exhibitionists. Sarvoan. for exam ple, in an
                                                                                                                       w                                       V
                                                           old-hat concrete poetry fad long ago super
                                                           seded in European circles, fills pages with one             Wlllllllll                                             llll
                 l       E                                 word like BLACK or "prints " books with noth
                                                           ing else but em pty pages. Among U.S. poets
                                                                                                                                                lllltllj i                  i
                                                           there are very few who. like Richard Kostel-                                                     1! mum
                oJ                                         anetz or Lynn Lonidier or Wallv Depew. ap
                                                           proach the genuine originality of a Bory or                       1                  1              i              •
                                                           Carrega. Kostelanetz. widely knowledgeable in
                                                           modern theater (author of The Theatre of Mixed                       1                1               1             1
               N                                           Means, 1968) and the whole U.S. contemporary
                                                           cultural scene, does poem s like a "Tribute to
                                                                                                                                 1                 1 !1                           1
                                                           Henry Ford” where part one is m ade up of a                             1                1              1 1 1
         0                                                 series of large T's arranged on the page like
                                                           cars in a parking lot. part two is a design with                           1               1             1
                                                           A s and part three is a cloverlead intersec
                                                                                                                                         1              1             1
    C                                                      tion design m ade out of A's and T's combined.
                                                              Lvnn Lonidier in her Po Tree (1967) works
                                                           out a contrapuntal meaning-graphics combina                                    1             1             1
                      LA   FROSDE                          tion that is very amusing, putting improbable
                                                           word-combinations like TENDER TENEM ENT
                                                                                                                                             1              1
                                Mich«*l L f. i r i s .     TENNIS DENTIST. PATENT EYES. BUILD-                                                1-----]
1 2 Michigan State News, E a s t L an sin g , M ichigan                                                                                         T uesd ay, N ovem ber 26, 1968
       A Skeleton Full Of Closets
                  (continued from page five)
    in 106 Wells Hall. Several hundred people                      ClAg|jwM
                                                                                   CLAM C l A f f
                                                                                                    XS-lclASi                            you do not have the right to look at us. at our
                                                                                                                                         apathy and m ediocrity, with disgust and dis
    gathered in a white-walled, concrete-block                                                                                          dain. Look outside that classroom window.
    ed. sterility ward. Thirty feet high, a 100 or                   /      »      /      /        /            / -— i                   Look at that glorious benefactor of all that is
                                                                           REST                     REST CLASS 1
    so feet long - it is the biggest john in the                 jjc U W i         CLASS CLASS
                                                                                                    ROOM                                 good and right. And then look into the ivory
                                                                           ROOM                                                          windows of your own minds. What have you
    world. I kept looking over m y shoulders ex
    pecting to see stalls lined up against the                                                                                           done to change it? To what extent are you
    walls. It is very hard for a speaker to develop            and then question why--maybe you will be                                 responsible for it? Or are you as we. petty
    anv rapport with an audience in that setting               gin to attack the problem in the proper per                              pawns lost in a petty gam e of status and
    or for the audience to respond: they just                  spective. That bored, uninterested class you                              information com m ercialism ? Do you also
    wanted to get up and leave.                                instruct is filled with m em bers of a ner                               plead ignorance and impotencv? Do you also
         I suggest that this cam pus is constructed            vous. confused, frustrated generation. We are                             squander your lives in prom ises for tomor
    in that fashion-vou just want to get up and                in a constant state of polarization. While                                row? Do you also sit with us in a nervous
    leave. Leave the dorms. Leave the large                    we      slush    through the       resignation and                        twilight of uncertainty, tapping your feet to
    classes (in Fall of 1966 there w ere over 25.000           life-w eariness of    our    parents         and        the               the    blissless         rhythm of cogs and hollow
    student       enrollm ents        in cla sses of 100 or     adult' world, w e feel a torrent within us                               voices?
    m orel. Leave the television lectures' (during             whine.       "But I thought      life w as m o re!”                                            The New Satisficer
     1966-67 over 62.000 students w ere enrolled in            While w e search to find ourselves, w e feel                                 The final closet of this article concerns the
    TV cla ssesi. Leave the im personal, non-hu-               the grasping claw s and the bony fingers of                               concept of "satisficing. " Satisficing is an
    man. sexless, tense environment that is MSU.               others tell us who w e are. While w e m ean                              econom ic term which reconciles the diffi
     Leave the anxiety and the pressures that we               der in daydream s and life in rom antic fields                            culty man has in optimizing his profits. On
    brought here and the fertile MSU soil within               of success, of love and of acknowledgem ent,                              the theoretical level econom ic man has per
     which they so eagerly blossomed.                          w e are placed in m echanical dorm s and                                  fect knowledge of all the variables: on the
         Empty rituals, pressure, m echanization,              promised jobs with IBM and Ford. While                                    real level he does not. So, he aim s for an area
     anxiety, crowds, isolatiom . totality, clas              w e yearn to "DO something, w e are rele                                 of econom ic returns within which he will be
     ses . . . Here is where the apathy lies: here              gated to the peanut gallery of the uncerti                              satisfied. Extend the meaning of profits to
     is where the drabness, the dull gloss of un               fied where w e wait and watch the quali                                 encom pass life-returns and w e notice that
     concerned eyes and minds are born. And for                 fied maim and botch our world. While we                                  the satisficer takes on new connotations. In
     all your concern as academ icians and teach               beg to be left alone, to withdraw from the                               stead of shooting for the best, w e now aim for
     ers. for all your fragm ented sincerity, your              pressure, to regain our composure, to allow                              the least worse and the best escape. School
     inability to challenge and to search for change            ourselves to coagulate and heal, w e are threat                         rather than the Draft. Suburbia rather than
     on the broad, m ore encom passing level of                 ened and coerced - Diploma or the Draft.                                 the City. Nixon rather than Humphrey. The
     the total environment, will be the reason                  Diploma or Failure. Diploma or Disgrace.                                 least worse type of life; the best escape from
     for your failure. When you stop doubting your                 MSU stands enclosed and encapsulated: an                              living. Freedom reigns and the American
     own actions as being insufficient, when you                assem bly line of rituals, a test of endurance.                          dream wins the pole vault at the Olympics.
     recapture the excitem ent that teaching once               Each succeeding year MSU strips her stu                                    In conclusion of this article and this se
      held, when you reconsider the pupil and chal             dents of patience and com passion, dism em                              ries. I ask that you consider a rather inter
      lenge the prem ise that the student has a                 bers their minds, shatters them into the frag                           esting paradox. If the U niverse im plies the
      plebian outlook, a childish desire to remain              m entary world of 'expertise without consci                             perfect and absolute containment of all that
      childlike and is the necessary recipient of               ence.' and forcibly molds their bodies into her                          exists, then how many U niverses constitute
      regurgitated knowledge: when you do that                   plastic im age. As teachers at this institution.                        a Multiverse.
   Dallas . .       (continued from page nine)
                                                                                                     P a p e r b o u n d s                          o n
                                                                                                                                               r e a d in g
                                                                                                                                                                 y o u r
                                                                                                                                                                                list?
                   The Garrison Commission
          Dist. Atty. Jim Garrison of New Orleans                                                                                                   FIVE SMOOTH
     feels that lie can answer those questions. His
      investigation from the fall of 1966 to the spring                                                                                                      STONES
     of 1967 led to the arrest on March 1. 1967.                                                                                                     By Ann F a i r b a i r n
      of Clay Shaw, a prominent New Orleans
      resident, for conspiracy in the assassination.                                                                                           P a p e r b a c k ..................$ 1 . 2 5
      Garrison claim ed to have solved the a ssa s
                                                                                                                                                FIVE SMOOTH STONES is
      sination with regard to the identity of the con                                                                                          th e s to ry o f one m an ’s
      spirators and their m otives. After the initial                                                                                           s e a r c h fo r dignity and lo v e .
      sensation the American news media looked the                                                                                              It m o v e s sw iftly fro m a
      other way as the w heels of justice rolled                                                                                                New O rle a n s g h e tto , w h ere
       through the appeal courts Shaw s law yers                                                                                                a black ch ild re a c h e s out
       sought an injunction against prosecution by                                                                                              fo r a b e tte r li f e , to th e
       Garrison on the grounds that Garrison had                                                                                                s c e n e s of in te n se beauty
       bribed and threatened w itnesses among other                                                                                             and b itte r n e s s th; t m a rk
       misdoings. N ew sw eek. Time. NBC and the                                                                                                h is jo u rn e y to m anhood . . .
       New Yorker repeated the charges. The judges                                                                                              h is in itia tio n into lo v e . A
       were apparently unimpressed; Garrison has won                                                                                            p a s s io n a te lo v e— r a r e and
       all legal encounters so far. The case is presently                                                                                       te n d e r ,     co n su m in g       and
       reaching the Supreme Court of Chief Justice                                                                                              tr a g ic — a fo rb id d en love
        Earl Warren.
                                 Conclusion
           While the precise details of the Garrison
       investigation must legally rem ain secret until                                                THE 10 BEST-SELLING PAPERBACKS
        the trial ( d e s p i i c polem ics to the effect that                              1.    The E xhibitionlst                                                   6.   C hristy
       (iarrison should put up now or shut upi.
                                                                                            2.    M yra B reckinridge                                                  7.    R o s e m a r y ’s B a b y
         Thompson's book m ore than any other has
                                                                                            3.    T h e P r e s i d e n t ’s P l a n e Is M i s s i n g                8.    Five Smooth Stones
        gone beyond m ere refutation of the Warren
                                                                                            4.    C o n f e s s i o n s of Nat T u r n e r                             9.    The G am es
        Report and has presented reasonable and con
        vincing alternatives regarding the events in                                        5.    The K lansm an                                                      10.    T he Plot
        D ealey Plaza. For the interested reader. I
        suggest the following list of sources as the
        best place to begin a look beyond the Warren
         Report. I further w elcom e any com m ents,
         opinions or questions regarding the details
         of the points of controversey and how the
                                                                                                                                             ookV or«
         photographs help to resolve them.
           No doubt the timing and content of this
         article will bring to m e charges of irrever
         ence or (at best) irresponsibility. To the latter
         charge I can only reply with the photographic
         evidence as I have studied it. To the first
         charge I stand in agreem ent with those who
         feel that the m em ory of President Kennedy s                                                                 O v e r 100 P u b l i s h e r s
         life is less than adequately served by the
                                                                                                                        S t o c k e d in o u r W a r e h o u s e
         official endorsement of a m endacious account
         of his death.