Everybody and his dog’s got a cause I didn’t have much farther to go. Just a few scant yards across the puddled concrete of the EMU ter race and I would be safely within the fishbowl. I could see it now; I’d pack up a paper, scan the personals, drink some coffee, watch the chess players, snag a passing friend, shoot the breeze, and maybe sneak a peek at The Guiding Light in the TV room to see if Peggy ever found out that Roger was the father of Holly's baby. Just a few more feet... ‘ ‘Scuzemecouldjaspareafewmo mentatalkaboutthespremespargas?” I should just keep on walking, I told myself, and pretend that I hadn’t heard anything. That’s what I should have done, but I knew that I couldn’t. Ever since 1 had read Milton’s “Areopagitica,” which panted out that one could learn the truth only by exposing himself to all possible viewpoints, I had been a sucker for these campus pitchmen. So far, stopping and listening to diem had been about as enlighten ing as a Sgt. Bilko rerun, but then again there was always the slight possibility that I might stroll right past the bearer of the Ultimate Truth and always be the poorer for it I stopped. “Uh, what was that?” The man’s stubbled face split into a gap-toothed smile. “The Supreme Asparagus,” he said, leading me out of the flow of traffic. A few passers-by cast sym pathetic looks in my direction: it was the same sort of expression that I imagined the surviving members of a school of fish wore when one of their number was snagged by a merciless angler. i wui leu you a story, me man was saying. “I will tell you why all the great religious leaders of the world secretly sacrifice pellets of fer tilizer at the altar of the Supreme Asparagus. 1 will tell you how John Lennon uses the hubcap of a 1937 Hudson Terraplane to carry out the Supreme Asparagus’ wishes. I will tell you how the Supreme As paragus annoints the tips of neophyte disciples with the Hal lowed Hollandaise. I will tell you how the Supreme Asparagus knows if you are a true believer, how he knows if you have faith, how he knows if you are sleeping, how he knows if you’re awake, how he knows if you’ve been bad or good so be good few goodness. . .” “Hey, hold it a minute,” I said. “Now 1 recognize you, you talked to me last week about the Omnipotent Potato. But you looked, different then, you were wearing Sears cot ton sheets and blue Pumas and this week it’s...” Penny’s percale and waffle stampers — the official garment of the Grand Cultivator of the Sup reme Asparagus,” he said proudly. “The Omnipotent Potato proved himself to be unworthy and was consumed in the Vegetable Armeg gedon last Thursday.” I sighed — Sgt. Bilko was Soc rates compared to this fruitcake. “So what’s the going contribution rate on this super artichoke,” 1 asked resignedly. “Please — the Supreme As paragus,” said the man, extending a coffee can. “And one may invoke the blessings of the Exalted Stalk for just one dollar.” I pulled a bill out of my pocket, tossed it in the can and headed for the door. The coast looked clear. Maybe, just maybe... “Hey comrade give all power to the people free political prisoners get pigs off campus fight repression stifle censorship abolish the CIA re call Boyd ban the bomb free Pales tine boycott scab lettuce back the CCDC control oil profits liberate Angola resist the tuition hike sup Graphic by Jon Comb* port Newton Chisolm Nader Cas tro Davis Ervin Leary Kesey Harris Ginsburg Bond Abzug Mao Teng down with Nixon Ford Rockefeller Kissinger Wallace Reagan Buckley Goldwater Connally Mitchell Schockley and destroy the bourgeois fascist militaristic capitalist anti-expressionist slave hoi ling imperialist war-mongering oligarchic bureaucracy.” “Do 1 have to do it all before lunch?” I asked. “The time for action is now, com rade,” said the man. He was wear ing a beret, a mustache and goatee, a black turtlenect, a tattered khaki jacket, 14 P.O.W. bracelets, a gun belt, canvas pants and combat boots. “The enemy is nearly upon us. And with the new development, we can scarcely hope to hold out.” “Uh, what new development?”'! asked, against my better judgment. “An FBI plot, my friend,” said the man, lowering his voice to a conspiratorial whisper. “Our agents forced the story out of Jack Ford by holding back his marijuana fix until he went into withdrawals.” “Inhuman!” 1 asserted. “But necessary,” he responded, “especially in the light of the seri ousness of the counter revolutio nary plan. It seems that Ella Fitz gerald has been enlisted to sing an ultrasonic note during the national anthem at the next Blazers-Lakers game, which will cause Bill Walton’s ankles to shatter and send him to the Mayo Clinic, where Angie Dickenson, disguised as a nurse, will lure him into an affair, using tactics the CIA taught her back in ’60. A photo of them in bed together will cause Angie’s hus band, Burt Bacharach, to get a di vorce and many Tatum O’Neal, whom he has been secretly dating. Jackie Kennedy, Burt’s other secret love, will be so enraged that$he will marry Eton John out of revenge, who will drop out of the record in dustry and manage Ari’s shipping fleet, leaving Bemie Taupin to team up with Frank Sinatra, who will go broke and move in with Bob Hope, who will soon grow sick of Sinatra and marry his long-time mistress Marie Osmond, which will enrage the entire Mormon population, at which time Dick Tuck will spread the word that Marie’s move was prompted by left-wing radicals. The Mormons will use the interest on their tobacco holdings to buy the U.S. Army and bingo — no more people’s resistance.” “That sounds serious,” I said. That sounds ridiculous, I thought “But we’re preparing,” the man assured me. “We’re putting to gether our own private army of pub lic relations men who will cut off Tuck’s message and spread the word that the military-industrial complex is the guilty party in Marie’s abduction. We’re receiving contributions for the army right now.” “Which average...?’ I sighed. “Just one dollar,” he said, ex tending a coffee can. I tossed in the bill, squatted down into a three-pointed stance and made a mad dash for the door, but something flew into my path. Going too fast to stop, I slammed into some kind of floating metal object and fell back on the concrete, dazed. ‘ ‘Hey, didn’t anyone ever tell you that running bums up precious ox ygen?’ I looked up toward the voice and saw a young woman sitting in a bright orange Navy hovercraft which was floating about four feet off the ground. The vehicle was saucer-shaped, about six feet in diameter and incredibly noisy. “Excuse me...l think,” I said, still a bit groggy. “And look at you!” shouted the woman over the hovercraft’s scream. “There you are, standing on the ground like it’s the most in nocent thing in the world.” 1 looked down at my Roots self consciously. “Uh, isn’t it?’ “Of course not!” bellowed the woman. “Why do you think I’m sit ting in this thing?’ ‘To be perfectly frank, 1 really don’t...” “I’ll tell you why!” she yelled. “It’s because every time you put one of your big feet on the ground you squash thousands of en dangered microorganisms. Did you know that the Dicomoneriphera is nearly extinct?” “Uh, no. Should I?” “If you value your life you should. Humanity is just one link in the global food chain and Di comoeriphera is the basis of it all. Besides, could anything be more beautiful than a family of Di comoneriphera taking an evening stroll across a 1000X microscope slide? And there you stand, killing them! I was going to make some sort of reply in my defense, but by then the exhaust fumes from the hovercraft had filled my lungs, and I sank to my knees, coughing. “It’s no use praying for forgive ness,” she told me, “when you kneel you just kill more of them. You can help, though. I’m the local emissary of the Commission on Re viving and Uplifting our Micros copic Brothers, and we’re going to construct a giant system of elevated walkways all over the world so that the earth can be left to the mic robes. After all, they were here first” “This system of walkways,” I began, “how much is the aver age...” “One dollar,” she said, presang a button on the hovercraft’s con sole. A hatch opened in the side of the vehicle and a metal arm reached toward me, holding a cof fee can. I plunked in four quarters, the arm retracted, and the woman and her craft zoomed over the hedge and out of sight. I was steamed. To hell with the “Areopagitica,” I thought, I’m going to quit being an easy touch for any two-bit activist who stakes out a square on the terrace. I paid my fees, I told myself angrily, and nobody, but nobody is going to keep me from opening that door and going insi-” “Excuse me.” That did it. “Listen, you crummy little half baked Bolshevik!” I roared. “Let me tell you what I believe! I believe that there is some sort of Supreme Being who has or had some sort of existence, but I do not know what form He, She, or it takes or took, or where He, She, or it lives or lived, or anything about He, She or It other than whoever or whatever the Sup reme Being is or was, I’m sure that He, She, or It doesn’t or didn’t want a platoon of peyote chewers and vegatable gardeners trying to peiss off everything from Astrology to zucchini as the Ultimate Answer. Politically, I am a liberal Democrat, and 1 believe that capitalism is an unjust system and that the wealth in America should be distributed more evenly — as long as I can be guaranteed that my wealth isn’t di vided up first. And as for ecology, I signed petitions for preserving French Pete and stopping seal kil lers and whale harpooners, but as for amoebas and paramedum I just don’t give the contents of a waste vacuole. So as far as I’m concerned you can take your pamphlets and your buttons and your coffee can and...” “Hey, wait a minute, said the fig ure at whom my tirade had been unleased. She was a tall, fair skinned woman, and I suddenly realized, she was not wearing a beret, buttons, or even an oppres sed expression. “That’s an interest ing set erf priorities you’ve got there, pal,” she said, “but all I really wanted to know is where I can find the TV room. I’m new in town, and I haven’t seen The Guiding Light since I set out from New York last week. I’ve really been worried be cause God, if Peggy finds out about Roger and Holly...” “...she’ll probably tell Ed and he’ll start boozing again,” 1 said. “Hey, I’m sorry about that out burst, it’s been a long morning.” “Oh, that’s okay,” she said as we strolled into the TV room. “But you’re wrong about Ed, he’ll prob ably just drop Holly and move back in with Janet.” “Maybe,” I conceded. “As the man outside would say, it all de pends on the Will of the Supreme Asparagus.” The woman’s face brightened. “Oh, wow, are you an As paragusdple too?” she squealed, pulling a bundle of stalks, several jars erf hollandaise and a ’54 Buick hubcap out of her backpack. “That’s incredible, 1 didn’t even know they had a parish out here. If you’ve got some fertilizer with you we could do a sacrifice right now— I’m afraid I used all of mine up at the Final Rite of Omnipotent Potato and I haven’t had a chance to get (Continued on Page 11)