-Caveat Lector-   <A HREF="http://www.ctrl.org/">
</A> -Cui Bono?-

This is a sequel to CONJURELLA, posted at:

http://www.morethanconquerors.simplenet.com/MCF/conjurel.htm
------------------------------------------------------

UNAUTHORIZED CONJURELLA: Housemates With Noaomi
Schechter, Ph.d, Activist-Psychologist With
"Psychologists for Social Responsibility"

by

T. Casey Brennan

Copyright 2000 by T. Casey Brennan



Within, there lurked the memory.

But this was 1970.  This was T. Casey Brennan at age
22, on a bus bound for Ann Arbor, fledgling comic book
writer for the Warren Publishing Company titles,
CREEPY, EERIE, and VAMPIRELLA, hell-bent on making his
presence known to Ann Arbor's now infamous campus
left.

This was 1970:  it would be a Tetragrammatonic 26
years before I would write the legend of CONJURELLA,
posted on the Internet initially by Anathema Research
of Austin, Texas in 1996, then picked up repeatedly
and posted and reposted, with and without
authorization, by a wide variety of Netizens, intent
on linking it to their own respective interests and
causes.  Twenty-six years before CONJURELLA would link
our family to the JFK assassination as our alleged
cousin, Howard Leslie Brennan, with his testimony
before the Warren Commission, never could.

This was 1970: I hated the Vietnam war, hated the
draft, loved the peace movement, loved the peace
demonstrators and the love-ins, loved the beads and
the beards and the flower children.  But I feared the
psychedelic drugs, and I feared the Communists; maybe,
just maybe, I even feared the "Communist conspiracy" I
had been told so much about, since boyhood.  This was
1970: it had been a scant three years since I had
resigned, after a little over a year, from the Port
Huron, Michigan chapter of the John Birch Society (I
had a membership card; was it Chapter 308? - I don't
remember anymore), headed by local right-wing dentist,
E. James Shay.  I had joined in late 1965, at the
invitation of Thaddeus B. Vance, who, like my late
father, sat on the St. Clair County Board of
Education.  My parents were William James Brennan and
paperback book author Alice Brennan, both Michigan
school board officials and tax opponents.  My late
mother had begun this process when, in the early
1950s, she took the position of Secretary (and CEO) of
the Swamp School District, Kenockee Township School
District #4, one of the last K-8, kindergarten through
eighth grade, school districts in the state.  Soon, my
late father had a similar position of authority on the
St. Clair County Board of Education, and the two of
them set off hand in hand to keep property taxes down,
and the one-room little red schoolhouses open for as
long as the voters would put up with it.  Inevitably,
they attracted the attention of the 1950s ultra-right
in that regard, and soon we were all deluged with
pamphlets from prolific McCarthyites coast to coast.

I had begun school in kindergarten at Swamp School in
September of 1953, at age 5.  But, I suppose, partly
because I could already read and write, and partly
because my mother was her boss, my teacher, Miss
Nolan, advanced me at once to the first grade, still
at the age of 5.  Hence, I entered high school at the
tender age of 13.  The Swamp School was a one-room
building on a gravel road, technically in Emmett,
Michigan.  Traditionally, our high-school students,
after graduating from the eighth grade, attended
school in neighboring Yale, Michigan.  But by the time
1961 had rolled around, and I had graduated grade
school, the Yale high school district was demanding
that we annex before they would take our high school
students.  For that, the Swamp School would be closed,
taxes would go sky high, and our children would
henceforth attend grade school in Yale.  My parents
would have none of it, and clearly, they were in a
political position to make deals.  So, deals they
made.  It was arranged that a local farm couple, Jim
and Mary O'Neill, would drive the handful of
high-school students that the Swamp School produced
each year, north on M-19, through Yale, to Peck High
School in Sanilac County, later to become infamous as
the home of convicted Oklahoma City bomber, Timothy
McVeigh.

Before long, the 13 year old high schooler version of
T. Casey Brennan was developing his own independent
personality and interests, sort of, and those
interests included comic book collecting, and
disseminating right-wing propoganda for the host of
ultraconservative groups which had expressed support
for my parents positions as property tax foes.

So my pile of special things included pamphlets from
the John Birch Society (as headed by Robert Welch),
the Cinema Educational Guild (by Myron Fagan, who
claimed credit for providing the Dies Committee with
the names of Hollywood Communists, though popular
history would later, inaccurately, assign this role to
Senator Joe McCarthy, who only investigated alleged
Communists in government, not Hollywood), the
Conservative Society of America (from Kent and Phoebe
Courney), the Christian Crusade (from Billy James
Hargis, smeared in the 1980s as a homosexual lover to
some of his followrs, though inexplicably, I am told
he has no recollection that these charges were ever
made against him), the 20th Century Reformation Hour
(from Carl McIntyre, who, much to my chagrin, became
an establishment-sanctioned spokesman for the
pro-Vietnam hawks during the Nixon Administration),
and the Christian Anticommunism Crusade (from Dr. Fred
G. Schwartz, whose New Orleans office shared a
building with the Fair Play for Cuba Committee)...with
early prototypes of comic book fanzines such as
ALTER-EGO, THE COMIC READER, THE KOMIX, and THE
ROCKET'S BLAST-COMICOLLECTOR.

Still, I had resisted actual membership in these
right-wing groups until my graduation from Peck High
School in 1965.  Then, in the fall of that year, at
the invitation of St. Clair County Board of Education
member Thaddeus B. Vance, I attended an introductory
meeting of the Birchers at something called The Round
Building, on Pine Grove Avenue, in Port Huron,
Michigan.  A man named Robert Lowry, who held the
office of Coordinator with the John Birch Society,
briefed us on our responsibilities as Birchers-to-be.
I joined, and stayed until 1967.  And it was with this
background, I proceeded, at the invitation of Larry
B., of 30 Hayden Hall, East Quad Residential College,
to meet with him, his cronies, and the now semi-famous
Naomi Schechter, Ph.d, now, in the year 2000, with the
activist group, PSYCHOLOGISTS FOR SOCIAL
RESPONSIBILITY.  In thirty years, I would set down the
plans for an unauthorized article on Naomi.  But not
yet.  This was 1970.

I had met Larry B. in Michigan's Upper Peninsula,
shortly after my twenty-second birthday, at a
campground, with my parents.  Actually, my dad had met
him first.  My dad had attended school at the
University of Michigan in the 1920s, but never
graduated.  Though he had no sympathy for the campus
left, he had, I suppose, a sense of nostalgia about
Ann Arbor, as most ex-Ann Arborites do.

Larry B. had introduced himself to my dad as an Ann
Arborite, and that, to my dad, had been sufficient to
offset the stigma of the campus activism which Larry
advocated.  Larry told stories of Baba Ram Das, the
White Panther Party, the Students for a Democratic
Society, and one of his teachers, Naomi Schechter,
closely associated, he said, with the campus left, and
then working on her Ph.d thesis.  And he invited me to
come to Ann Arbor, to stay in East Quad.

So this was 1970: this was T. Casey Brennan, now on a
bus bound for Ann Arbor, intent on imposing his
invited, but unwanted, presence on Ann Arbor's campus
left.

The day before I left, I had watched the movie
WOODSTOCK, at Port Huron's Family Theater on Military
Street.  I was prepared.  These campus left guys were
great, I decided.

I had taken the bus from Port Huron to Detroit, and
changed buses in Detroit for Ann Arbor.  I have a
beard now, anathema in my ancestral home of Avoca,
Michigan, and I am glad to be in Detroit, where I
won't be hassled for having it.  From the bus, I flash
the peace sign to a black cab driver.  He returns it.
I'm part of the movement, man.

Larry B. has advised me to disembark at the Michigan
Union, a scheduled stop of the Greyhound on which I
ride.  Had I seen the Greyhound Station on Huron
Street first, with it's standard clientele of drunks
and beggars, I may have received a different
impression of Ann Arbor.  I was later to work at the
Huron Street Greyhound station, from November 1973
till March 1974, when I moved here, as had been my
intent, even then.  The Greyhound Station had been
managed, in those days, by Red Simpson.  He had two
sons, John and George.  George, they said, had
disappeared for about a year, and returned, with a sex
change operation, as "Gail" Simpson.  The bus drivers
had been mortified, always referring to Gail as
"He...she...it" in the course of a conversation.

But this is 1970: I am not to see the Greyhound
station yet, nor will I actually move to Ann Arbor for
another three years.  Just before the Michigan Union
bus stop, I see Larry B. walking on the street.  I
wave to him, but he does not see me.  So I proceed, on
his direction, through Ann Arbor's tumultuous diag of
1970, bound for East Quad.  The "Tent City" protest,
in which protestors pitched pup tents on the diag, is
in full swing.  Soon, police will sweep it away, on
the advice that a hepatitis carrier has spread disease
throughout the community.

I arrive at 30 Hayden Hall, East Quadrangle
Residential College, but Larry is not there.  Soon he
arrives, beaming.  He is, he says, delighted that I
have accepted his invitation.

His letters have told me much about the now
semi-famous Naomi Schechter.  A Jewish girl whose
parents, he said, were both registered Communists; an
activist, a psychology teacher, highly intelligent,
but with severe acne.  Some years later, she will
undergo facial surgery to correct the problem.

He had made it clear in his letters that she wanted to
meet me.  I had envisioned a romance.  Boys will be
boys.  I had envisioned myself, T. Casey Brennan,
fledgling comic book writer for CREEPY and EERIE, with
my own Joan Baez, whose parents were both registered
Communists, leading the campus leftists to victory
over the supporters of the Vietnam war, and my very
recent, former friends, the John Birch Society.  But
that was not to be.  Some time between August of 1970,
when Larry B. had invited me to East Quad at the Upper
Peninsula campground, and October 1970, when I
actually made the journey, Larry had relayed the bad
news:  Naomi had taken on a live-in lover at her home
on Ellsworth Road in Ypsilanti, where I was to stay,
briefly, intermittently, with my stays at 30 Hayden
Hall, East Quad.  Larry described him as "a
silk-screener named Joe".  Joe had an Italian surname;
I don't remember it.  He was, as I recall, one of the
early directors of Ozone House, a still existing Ann
Arbor group which supplies teen-age runaways with
food, clothing, and anti-drug pamphlets.  Joe alleged
that his uncle had been murdered by the Mafia.  Larry
alleged that Joe was one of the biggest drug dealers
in Washtenaw County, but, he said, just marijuana and
hashish.

Despite all that, Larry B., and his room-mate, Dave,
determined that my stay at East Quad should include my
first experience with that staple diet of campus
demonstrators, marijuana.

So, that night at East Quad, I smoked marijuana for
the first time.

I smoke some that night, and the following morning,
then wander around the campus area of South
University, determined that I have now incurred
permanent brain damage from it.  In addition to my
comic scripts for CREEPY and EERIE, I have also
written some short stories for a magazine called
LISTEN, edited by Francis A. Soper and Twyla
Schlotthauer.  My checks say Narcotics Education,
Inc., but it is really a vehicle of the Seventh Day
Adventist Church in Washington, D.C.  They are
anti-drug, anti-cigarettes, anti-meat-eating,
anti-everything.  Later, in the mid-1970s, when I am
living at Xanadu Co-op on 1811 Washtenaw, marijuana
salesmen will call them and tell them that I have been
"caught" smoking marijuana (which they have sold me),
as part of an on-going attempt by the campus left to
sabotage my career.  Undaunted, I write a
pro-vegetarian story called "I Love Meat", a satire
more derived from my VAMPIRELLA stories than anything
else (see Warren Publishing's VAMPIRELLA magazines #s
5, 17-21, and 109, and Harris Comics VAMPIRELLA OF
DRAKULON #1-3, reprinted in 1996, and the trade
paperback, VAMPIRELLA: TRANSCENDING TIME & SPACE,
co-authored with Steve Englehart).  It's about a
literal meat-vampire, a meat-addict: Soper rejects it,
but it ends up published in 1977 issues of VEGETARIAN
TIMES and a short-lived HIGH TIMES imitator called
FLASH (no relation to the DC comic of the same name),
in the latter case, accompanied by an illustration
from legendary underground comic artist, Robert
Williams.  A quote from the story, beginning "Poor
animals..." has now been picked up by vegetarian
activists on the Internet world-wide...astute
Net-searchers will find it posted widely on the Net
and Usenet, listing me with the greatest philosophers
of history.  What's more, Soper later forgave me for
being "caught" by the Xanadu marijuana peddlers, and
published my publicity stunt essays about being an
award winning comic book writer wanting to take
smoking out of comic books in his early 1980s
companion to LISTEN, a newsletter called SMOKE
SIGNALS: the result being that the articles were
entered into CONGRESSIONAL RECORD - SENATE, Sept. 28,
1982, Vol. 128, No. 131, page S12435, and commented
upon in the U.N. World Health Organization magazine
from Geneva, WORLD HEALTH, October 1983, page 30, and
January-February 1986, page 9, issues; and THAT
culminating in a Proclamation, dated December 22,
1989, carrying the Great Seal of the State of
Arkansas, and the signatures of then-Governor Bill
Clinton and his Secretary of State, designating
January 1990 as T. CASEY BRENNAN MONTH in the State of
Arkansas.  All because of my association with Francis
A. Soper, whom I then believed.

So I sit with a girl I just met, by a campus building
in Ann Arbor, the second day of my trip, and tell her
she must never smoke marijuana.  It causes permanent
brain damage, I tell her.  Amusedly, she agrees, and
promises.  I go on to say, I may contact LISTEN
magazine, and see if they can arrange some kind of
speaking tour.  Or, maybe, I'm thinking, the John
Birchers, but I don't tell her that.

That part is secret, must be, cannot be told in my
quest to woo the campus left of Ann Arbor.

Soon, we meet Naomi and Joe.  I am to stay there for a
few days, as per our agreement.  The house is on
Ellsworth Road, Ypsilanti.

Joe produces two forms of hashish, Pakistani and
Nepalese, he says.  Naomi says they are afraid to
smoke the Nepalese hashish: "It's too intense," she
says.  Later, Joe takes me to his silk screen shop,
which he owns.  I think it's called The Silk Screen
Shop.  He tells me that the form of printing called
silk-screening produces, not just t-shirts with
cartoons on them, but also the illustrations that
graced 1970-style pin-ball machines.

Naomi is then working on her Ph.d. thesis.  She gives
me a battery of tests, for practice, she says,
including the standard Minnesota Multiphasic
Personality Inventory test, as well as something she
has invented, using the Rider deck of Tarot cards, as
designed by Arthur Edward Waite, much preferred by
hippies of that era.  Interestingly, in a classic
anachronism, the early 1970s television program KUNG
FU, starring David Carradine as a pseudo-Chinese
Shaolin priest, used the Rider deck in an episode set
in the 1860s, wielded by his guest-star father,
one-time Dracula portrayer, John Carradine, in spite
of the fact that the Rider deck was not produced until
the 1920s.

I ask Naomi about the police, "the pligs, myan", as we
called them then.

"They don't come out here unless we call them," she
says.

I take Naomi's tests, then smoke the Nepalese hash
that she has recommended against.  I have a dream
about a world covered with green foliage, with men
with green helmets walking about in it, then go
outside, thinking I amgoing to throw up.  Joe comes
out, offering sympathy, but in a moment, I am okay.

I take a ride with Naomi in her jalopy.  As we pull
out of driveways, I watch, repeatedly, for oncoming
traffic.  Naomi spots me doing this, and curses me.

"I thought men were supposed to help girls drive!" I
say.

"Well," Naomi says, "You've been improperly trained."

I meet Naomi's friends.

One is a man named Tom.  He says he owns a health food
something-or-other on Liberty Street.  He has fluffy
curly hair, but no mustache or beard.  Joe has a
mustache.

One day, we wake up and Tom is annoyed by buzzing
flies sticking to the fly paper in Naomi's living
room.  He applies his lit cigarette lighter.

"Better that they die that way, than slowly," Tom
says.

Another is a traveller from England, a man with his
long hair in a bun, like the old ladies I had known in
my boyhood in Avoca, Michigan.

He tries to be friendly, but I see him as one of those
members of the Communist conspiracy the John Birchers
have told me about.  He tells me of his efforts to
organize the cockneys in England, but, he says, he is
thwarted.  He says they admire the upper-class English
accent.

Naomi takes me aside later and says: "We don't know
what he does.  He may kill people."

Another is a pretty girl who brings a box of slides,
which she presents to me and Joe.  She says, "There is
a picture of me in there..."

She giggles.

"Well," she says, "I don't know..."  Then she giggles
some more.

She leaves.  Joe and I light joints, and set to work,
examining the box of a thousand slides, one by one,
looking for the implied nude picture of the girl who
has just left.  One by one, we examine each boring
vacation slide, shake our heads, and move on.  It just
isn't there.  We have been tricked.

I meet Larry B.'s friends.

Larry takes me to the Halfway Inn, in East Quad.  He
points out a student with a picture of a clenched fist
on the back of his denim jacket.

Larry B. says, "Casey, you see that guy?  He was
arrested at a demonstration for throwing a rock at a
cop.  And he didn't do it!"

Larry also points out an East Quad drug dealer called
Strike.

"Strike's a prick," says Larry B., "Strike works
directly under Joe."

Later, Strike, a student with longish hair, a beard,
and a furtive look, tells me in a hallway: "Everybody
here is out to get me."

And, through Strike, I have had my first glimpse of
the apolitical vendettas of Ann Arbor's campus left,
so intent on victimizing their own.

Later, Naomi tells me she may not complete her Ph.d
thesis.  I embark on a campaign of persuasion,
conceiving various approaches for talking her into it.
 It will be, she says, if she finishes it, a treatise
on the Tarot cards and psychology.  Following repeated
phone calls along this line, I finally conceive of
this:

"Maybe girls shouldn't have Ph.d's," I say.

"That does it," she says, "I'm going to do it."

And she did.  And now she is a semi-famous activist
with Psychologists for Social Responsibility,
following in the footsteps of her registered Communist
parents; her friend Larry B. (and his hero, Baba Ram
Das); her friend Tom, who sold health food and burned
flies with his lighter; her friend with his hair in
bun who may have killed people; and her boyfriend Joe,
who ran a silk-screen shop and Ozone House, and whose
uncle was killed by the Mafia.

This was the memory that lurked within:

Before Naomi, Joe, and Larry B. giving me marijuana
and hashish in 1970, there had been J.H. Earnshaw
giving me LSD in the late 1950s.  We had met him
through David Ferrie, who died during the Garrison
investigation.  Menacingly, Earnshaw had claimed
association with the CIA's illegal MK-ULTRA
experimentation program, begun in 1953, and
investigated by Senator Edward M. Kennedy, before a
Senate Committee, in 1977.  My dad's interests had
included not merely school taxes and right-wing
politics, but also hypnosis, which was Earnshaw's
specialty.  Earnshaw, an Osteopathic physician in Port
Hope, Michigan, reportedly died in 1984, though he
continued to be listed in the American Osteopathic
Association Yearbook long after that.  On November 22,
1963, Earnshaw and David Ferrie kidnapped me from the
Yale, Michigan airport, with the assistance of my late
father, and forced me to initiate the firing from the
Texas School Book Depository Building in Dallas.  That
was what I wrote about in "Conjurella".  Lee was
innocent.  I was not.

And this was the last memory of Naomi, not the LAST
memory, but the memory that lingered, the way the
memory of my single shot in Dallas, before I
collapsed, before David Ferrie assumed command of the
weapon and resumed firing, could not.

Naomi shows me a crystal by her window, that creates
flickering lights and colors.  It hangs by the couch
on which I sleep; I do not sleep with her, the
presence of Joe has seen to that.  But in the morning
on that day, whatever day it was, Naomi comes to
awaken me.

She stands over me in the flickering light of the
crystal, as the effect of the Nepalese hash lingers on
in my unaccustomed brain.

I watch as she tosses her head, leans from side to
side, and strikes poses in the window light of
morning.

In my fear of Nepalese hashish and Communist
conspirators, in my apprehension of the vendetta
against Strike, and the man with his hair in a bun,
and Joe whose uncle was killed by the Mafia, and her
Communist parents, I have almost forgotten how pretty
she is.  But now, her long curly hair glistens in the
morning light, in the light of the crystal, and she
fans it out like a veil, as she weaves and tosses.

"NAOMI!" I say, with awe.  And I need say no more.
She knows.

"That will last a long time," she says.

And it did.


                     The End


















=====
http://www.alanluck.com/truth_is_out_there.htm  
http://www.ozemail.com.au/~realoto/eqv3c.html
http://www.konformist.com/mkkafe/tcasey/tcasey.htm  http://www.wynd.org/tcb.html
http://www.sentex.net/~dvanhorn/tcasey/tcasey.html  http://www.16ton.com/colo/tcb.htm
http://www.sentex.net/~dvanhorn/tcasey/tcasey2.html
http://www.morethanconquerors.simplenet.com/MCF/victm-hm.htm#Brennan
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Parthenon/7069/brennan.html
http://www.davestevens.com/ds_harri.htm  
http://www.vampifan.com/other/htmls/other.html  
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Cafe/2544/arq.htm

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