Back in the US.: Postcard
from Judson Crews, 9 July 1988.
Carol Bergé: Carol
Bergé is the author of numerous books, including Acts of Love,
An American Novel (Indianapolis, 1973), and Alba Nemesis,
The China Poems 1969-1978 (Albuquerque, 1979).
feels like home: J.
Weishaus, "Feels Like Home Again."
in the middle: Letter
from John Bell, 10 October 1988. Jay had died the day before.
in which: J. Weishaus.
From, "Eight New York Poems."
the contraction: Robert
Hall. (Marrone, 1990).
the solar plexus: (Mindell,
1982).
its founder: Ida
Rolf. "We must see man as an energy field, rather than a mass
of matter; a field which lives within a greater field, the field of
the earth."
where all directions: J.
Weishaus. From, General Notebook.
Richard Heckler: Now
a fourth-degree black belt in aikido, with a doctorate in psychology,
Richard Strozzi Heckler is the author of many books.
George Leonard: "George
Leonard, the editor of Look came and spent the afternoon talking
about the 1st January 1970 issue he plans to call 'Into the Seventies.'
It is remarkable to see a man in a position like his still so uncorrupted
and enthisiastic." (Rexroth, 1985).
Did you ever: K. Rexroth.
(Meltzer, 1971).
glanced up: (Leonard,
1978).
Everyone I contacted: (Leonard,
1975).
after two thousand: R.
Dubos. (Dubos and Escande, 1979).
stuff wood's hair: J.
Weishaus, "Curing It."
It was the: (Poncé,
1973).
live like old: J.
Weishaus, "For the Record." For D.H. Lawrence.
Men At work: Ahsahta
Press. Boise, ID., 1989.
in our nuclei: (Thomas,
1971).
solutio: (Edinger,
1990).
feel strange: "Thinking
very hard about the same problem for several hours can produce a severe
fatigue, close to a breakdown. I never really experienced a breakdown,
but have felt 'strange inside' two or three times during my life." (Ylam,
1976).
in order: "I
don't think Alexander the Great conquered anything. The ambitious one
was his horse. So Alexander surrendered himself to his horse and did
what the horse wanted to do." (Jodorowsky, 1971).
George Hartley: Shortly
after receiving his Ph.D., George left New Mexico to begin his unversity
career at Ohio State University. His Ph.D. thesis was published as Textual
Politics and the Language Poets. Bloomington, IN., 1989.