Hi,
»»
I read your site with a lot of interest. Not everyone stayed in Milwaukee,
naturally. My take on what happened shifts in interesting ways
when I read your work; I was a shadow on the "other
side" of the K'scope effort. But, I remember vividly working
alongside Gene Caldwell on the layout of Vol I, No 1. The East Side will always be a defining time/place as far as I
am concerned. My part was conditioned by my student/factory
worker/K'scope activities. Here in Winston-Salem
NC last week, the first lunch
counter sit-in was commemorated; not many younger people showed
up. A lot of the struggle has been lost, and sometime soon a new
one will be necessary. As a historian, it makes me sad, and
cautious, in my own work with reconstructing the past.
Keep on with the site!
Harry
|
From:
Harry Titus <titus@wfu.edu>
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com
Comments Date: Mon.
28 Feb 2000
Subject: K'scope,
etc.
Harry
Titus
Art Department, Box 7232
Wake Forest University
Winston-Salem, NC 27109
Tel: (336) 758-5081
Fax: (336) 758-6014
http://www.wfu.edu/~titus
Former
Art Critic, Art Editor, etc.,
Kaleidoscope 1967
Return
to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
Hi Mike,
»»
I've been gradually reading the stuff on your site and enjoying
it immensely! I appreciate the wide range of material, the memory
for details (as in the longshoreman story), the historical perspective (as in just
about everything).
I agree that the sexism you display in the coffee house article is about as tame as it gets. If a singer is
outstandingly attractive it would be impossible not to notice.
If you are writing a review there would be no reason not to
mention it especially in the entertainment field. I guess back in
those days (the publication date is not mentioned, is it?) people
were not so conscious of "packaging a product in the music
industry." Today we're more conscious of the package than
the music.
There's
a lot there (in your site) and I hope to gradually get
through it all. But, then, I don't know how fast you're
adding to it! I already spend hours and hours in front of my
computer screen.
I began with computers only two years ago
and when I lost my job of 10 years as Activity Therapist at a chemical dependency treatment center --
they closed down -- an opportunity arose to return to
school. I chose a two year course toward a Master of Science
degree at Cardinal Stritch
University in Computer Science
Education and in two more months I'll be through. I started
from scratch and have learned a lot. I hope it's enough to
get a good job so I can soon begin saving for retirement now
that I'm old enough to retire!
I'm not sure what kind of job I'll get although it will
probably involve the Internet. You can check out my own
website (originally a classroom project that is taking on a
life of it's own) at <www.stritch.edu/~rollman> [discontinued].
[See http://www.rick.ollman.com/
]
Currently, I've been studying Java and
using it to create word games which are playable but still
being developed.
You won't run in to me at the gym these days but you might
find me at a golf course -- I've reached that certain age!
Actually, I don't have time for too much besides school
since I'm still working full time, too, on weekends as a
Personal Care Worker in a group home for developmentally
disabled young women. I can sleep on the job if the girls
are asleep (I work nights, mostly) or study if the work is
done. Of course there's no money there but I have health
insurance and other benefits. And there are few jobs that
blend so well with school.
I forwarded your URL to my brother Barry last week
and again today with the update. He is living in Denver with his
wife and younger daughter and has another daughter at Tufts
in Boston. He works as a stockbroker but has several
side gigs. He is developing, as co-financier, a company that
created a self-tuning guitar. It's really pretty amazing.
Not only can you tweak the tuning if it's going out of tune
but you can change to one of hundreds of pre-programmed, or
custom tunings in a single beat. Check it out at www.selftuning.com. He also
buys and sells autographs and music memorabilia,
specializing in Woody Guthrie material.
He had to drop out of his rock band several years ago --
just too busy.
As I was reading your site last week I ran across the name
of Jerry Berndt, I think in
reference to work at the Milw. Journal years ago.
I reconnected with him recently. He is working as a
photographer in Paris. I'm not sure what his most recent
work is like but last year he had some photos on a website
(no longer there apparently) that were mysterious black and
white images of street scenes with hints of unexplained
violence and distress that were not easy to decipher.
My other brother, Arthur, who hasn't
lived in Milwaukee since high school, is the director
of the Museum of Photographic Arts in San Diego <www.mopa.org >. They
recently completed a huge expansion project which gives them
a movie theater, among other amenities, for the first time.
My whole family was there for the opening two weeks ago.
Arthur surprised me with a special screening of a few items
that included a 16mm work titled "rick" made in Madison in the 60s by Jerry
Berndt! I had only seen parts of it while it was
still being edited. It consisted of me playing a classical
guitar piece on the top of a fire escape of a brick walk-up
apartment house. There were views from above, from the
ground and close-ups. After a couple minutes of this there
was documentary footage of soldiers marching through an
occupied city and the whole perspective changes. The music
continues throughout but takes on an elegiac tone. I think
it was his first film and I don't even know if he made more.
I wrote to him at jwberndt2@aol.com and
included your URL. He responded with a short note saying he
would write more when he had time.
Salomea
is
currently working as a courier for Quicksilver
Express Couriers. She suffered from intense and constant
migraines for five years that was cured two years ago with a
combination of herbs and diet. We found an herbalist near Lake
Geneva. Now that she is able to get out into the
world and actually turn her head and look around without
pain she loves driving around the city and countryside and
see what's happening in the world outside of our once
heavily-curtained bedroom.
We live in the Sherman Park
neighborhood and don't get to the East Side very often. I get out to Woodland
Pattern events fairly often, if I'm not working, and
occasionally theater productions downtown. But you brought
back a lot of memories of an era that seems to have
disappeared with your web site and I thank you for what
you're doing.
Keep in touch,
Rick
. . . Just started a new
job this week as »»
"Internet Content Developer" for Trisept
Solutions, a sister company of The Mark Travel Corp. We mainly
build sites for the travel industry.
I'm also developing a few sites on my
own including http://www.woodlandpattern.org/
|
Date:
Mon, 13 Mar 2000
From: Rick Ollman
<rollmans@yahoo.com>
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com
Salomea & Rick Ollman
Milwaukee
musician & poet
Former East Side resident & UWM student
Computer Science M.S., Cardinal Stritch
Sherman Park area resident
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
[New, from Teri
Regano]
»»
I
like it ! To say that you've put some work in this, is an
understatement. I'm impressed. I have to be honest...I just
did a quick browse - hopefully, one of these days, I'll have
the time to really do some reading. I've had little or no
time these last several months.
It was really tempting to spend a great deal of time....I
saw the names of people and places that I haven't heard in
decades. Brought back a lot of old memories.
Please
feel free to ask for the use of my small collection of Bugles and K'scopes and Brady St. posters if
ever you feel the need. I have a digital camera (a Sony
Mavica....it uses floppies, unlike the others that have to
be downloaded) so I could shoot the posters for you and just
give you the disk.
Thanks for the link to the Brady St. site....it's
boring, but we're planning to do something about that.
ttyl....
T.
|
From:
"Teri" <islateri@prodigy.net>
To: "Mike Zetteler" <mzetteler@wi.rr.com>
Subject: The new look
Date: Sat, 19 Aug 2000
Teri Regano
Owner
& Manager
Regano's Roman
Coin
1004 East Brady Street
Milwaukee, WI
Director
Brady Street Area Association
Return
to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
[New, from Diane M. Rey]
»»
Hi Mike...Nice job
on the page. Did you realize that your recorded message does
not work? [Since corrected --M.Z.] I looked at
your source code and all I can see that might be wrong is
that you have it in an F:/ file. Is that a file on YOUR
computer or on execpc.com's? If it's on your hard drive, you
would be the only one able to hear it. Anyway...way to
go!!!! Nice pages and looking forward to seeing the rest of
them. My new email is Diane@jesstar.com
so
please include me when you send out news of updates. Jess gave me the
address this time and I figured you may have used the one
that was on my card and I don't use it anymore. So, there
you have it. Keep up the good work!! Diane
[Defunct Links Above]
|
From:
Diane M. Rey
(Diane@jesstar.com)
Jess Jespersen Photo
Diane M. Rey & Jess Jespersen
At O'B/GS's
Original Lie to Me Lounge
[now Jamo's]
AOL
Instant Messenger Name:
Lass2U ICQ# 8845334
Web site designer
Former Wisconsin resident
Resident of Arizona
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
To: Mike Z.
From: Phil
Wroblewski
»»
Good
to see your site up & running. It's sunny (mostly)
& quiet here in So. Cal. where I'm living the single life
& working as a clinical psychologist. I hope to get back to
Milwaukee for a visit someday. . . .
---------------------------------------------------
[see below for another message --Mike Z.]
Date: Tue, 27 Jun 2006
From: PhilWrob
Subject: "GEORGIE"
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com
howdaf__kareya? This is a letter I wrote to George [Johnson], threatening to
call him Georgie. You can use it in your history (as in
whateverhappenedto?) … add it to my history.
To: 'george johnson'
Subject: "GEORGIE"
So there I was, 1986, in Oakland CA, on a
weekday afternoon, with little to do (or a lot to do but I
was procrastinating) but listen to my favorite conservative
talk show host (Jim Eason?) and he
was interviewing George Shearing and Mel Torme who were in
town for a concert. They were talking about how they had
known each other for 30+ years and how Mel had always called
Shearing “Georgie.” Only to find out just recently that
Shearing (being British) hated being called that. So Torme
said: “I can understand. I would hate it if anyone called
me Melvie.” At this point I call in to register my support
for Shearing. They had just talked about great Bop pianists
and I wanted to point out that they left George Shearing off
the list. While I’m waiting my turn at 15 min. of fame,
Torme is talking about needing old DownBeat magazines
from the late 40’s and early 50’s. He was doing a book
and lost or couldn’t find them and he was sending out the
message that he needed them. So my turn comes and I make
George Shearing famous…and then add that I might be able
to find those DownBeats and what might they be worth
to Mel Torme IF they could be found … IF IF IF. He starts
talking about “eternal gratitude” ….and then I asked
if I could call him Melvie? There was this long second of
dead silence and then all three of them broke up.
Phil
|
From: PhilWrob
[mailto:pwroblewski@cox.net]
Sent: Sunday, June 25, 2006
Former UWM
student & East Sider
A professional who made it out of Milw.
Jazz lover
Nice enough guy, but now a boring
conservative
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Index [Bottom]
|
Hi Mike -
»»
Quite nice to hear from you. Would have responded much sooner but
we've all been really sick around here for two weeks. But it's
Monday morning and everyone is back at school and work and life
is good again. This will have to be short because I'm back in my
(home) office with piles of stuff to do.
Your web site looks great. I
can appreciate the effort you've been putting into it (I've been
learning how to do it too, so I can set up 3 sites for HB - my
business). I'm nowhere near as good as you yet.
I think it only fitting and proper if you become the historic
documentarian of Milwaukee's
counter culture. Very cool idea - I hope you keep expanding it.
I heard about Priscilla,
what
did she die of? Sorry about your Mom, she was always
very generous to me. Tell me about Kathy! What's she doin?
I didn't know you had seen Jon. He and Lisa, his fiancé, live
above the Up and Under on Brady - really nice
place. I'd love to tell you more about life in Marcialand and I will very
soon. But for now I just wanted to acknowledge that I have seen
your site and am enjoying it very much.
Give me your address - I have a pin I want to send you.
Take care of yourself,
Marcia
[Message 2 from Marcia Drouin
Smith] »»
Michael -
I just listened to your recorded message for the
first time (didn't work before) and if you take the time to
do an audio message at least say a little more! You know,
something wacky like welcome to my web page! And I hope it
rekindles some memories of
Milwaukee's East Side during the
years of yadda, yadda, yadda...you know - people like to see
and hear you - so say something. [Since
corrected --M.Z.]
Is waiting for an e-mail reply from you like waiting to do
lunch with you?
(Nice to know my naked pics are
safe with you!)
Are you doing the Census? Are people turning on you? Chelsea said the
census people came to her school to get kids to work in the
office. Are you working in the office or going door to door?
I'd be curious to hear how people are responding to the long
form.
yourfriendmarcia
|
Date: Mon, 13 Mar 2000
From: The
Smith Family
Reply-To: CreativeSmith@wi.rr.com
To: Mike Zetteler
<mzetteler@wi.rr.com>
Subject: hey
you
Mike Zetteler & Marcia Drouin
Circa 1973 -- Kurt Holzhauer Wedding
Chelsea
& Marcia Smith
Circa 1983
Marcia (Drouin) Smith
Former East Side resident
Former reporter: Marquette, MI &
Dubuque, IA
Freelance writer
Serves free meals to the poor (see photo)
Resident of Cedarburg, WI
[Message 2 from Marcia]
Date: Tue, 16
May 2000
Subject: Welcome
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|
Matt's E-Mail
E-Mail
for
Clubhouse.
»»
This
is the first time that I'm mentioned anywhere in
the history of Milwaukee's Counterculture. I know
that I was there until August of 1966, very
active in the anti-war movement (or did I
hallucinate all that?). Trouble is, that I wrote no poetry
and most of the history starts in the late 60s when I was
in Pittsburgh. We had
some "hairy" times there too. When MLK was
assassinated, there was a rally at a black church at the
edge of "The Hill" (Pittsburgh is a city of hills,
and they tend to be ethnic ghettos and "The Hill"
is one of the Black Hills) overlooking Three Rivers Stadium.
First
there was an attempt to assassinate the minister
holding the rally. At the same time we could look up the
street, into the ghetto and see
half the street burning. If we looked the other way,
toward Three Rivers Stadium, we could see tanks (yes real
tanks) coming up the freeway ramps and into the ghetto. No
wonder, that I thought that America would not survive the
war with itself. A months after that, an old friend from
Milwaukee, Milt Bratz (do you
remember him? probably not) started graduate school at Pitt. I scared
him and his wife off by talking about the need for armed
revolution and exhorting him to get guns.
Well
it was his fault -- he should not have tried a surprise
visit on the afternoon that I was whacked on psilocybin. A
few days later, I apologized but the damage was done. His
wife thought I was nuts (and rude).
I
like the website. Good to
see those photos that Ralph took. The
versions that he sent me were so huge that I couldn't see
them all at once. They are nice and it's sad that all that
stuff was burned out and even worse if it was deliberate
arson. Hope you are well and that your teeth are no longer
throbbing with pain.
Take
care, Matt
[Message 2 from Matt Wilensky, Fwd
from Ralph
Larsen]
...and
how come you're not working today [Ralph]. I assume
this is your home. I hope you are well and not laid up with
something debilitating. God! Ralph Larsen! (hisownbadself).
Remember the Hate Society? The
Shaving Cream birthday party we held for you (and everyone
else who could drink themselves into a coma). No more comas
for me because I tend to have blackouts and do embarrassing
things. Even when I drink moderately, I tend to drop things
(like a wine bottle all over the dinner table) and have
miserable hangovers the next few days (days! sic!). I'm 60
years old and my body can't take it anymore. Hasn't been
able to for 10 years now. I live in Escondido,
Ca. This is a little town, just 25 miles north
of San Diego. Am a Clinical
Psychologist, working a lot with domestically violent
men; otherwise I do as little as possible. At the last
thing, I'm a success; but it doesn't pay very well. Comes
the "Revolution" and I'll get paid for sitting
around (or even laying around) and thinking. It's my right,
written into the Constitution: "Life, Liberty, and the
Purfuit of Happineff." I was married once, (no
children), and that was enough. I'm just not made for
marriage. I almost never let my defenses down and just can't
do that intimacy thing that women need. I became a
psychologist so that I could understand things like that;
and I do understand, but that doesn't mean that I can do it
on a sustained basis. So I married a woman who was as
damaged as me, and it was a friggin' disaster. The stress
was so bad, I got into heavy drugs (massive amounts of speed
to keep my spirits (and my dick) up). Speed gives you the
"dickofdeath" you know. These days, I'm very
mellow (age helps) . [Everything else], I notice, gives me a
slight "fuzzy" feeling for a day or so afterwards.
I've become a Libertarian/Fiscal Conservative/Republican. A
supporter of John McCain and even a
closet Allan Keyes enthusiast.
How's that for change???? In 1992, I voted
for Clinton. After watching him for 2 years, I
began to metamorphosize and now, I think, I'm a butterfly. Mike Z. doesn't
like it and neither does my brother Steve. But I'm a
recovering Socialist and it works for me, one day at a
time. CASE IN POINT: I was watching C-SPAN this
morning and some political columnist from, I think the
Atlanta Constitution was being interviewed. They asked him
about the Confederate flag issue.
He said that the previous governor tried to change the
flying of this flag and lost a lot of political support.
Then he said something which astounded me. Amazed me! He
said that as the controversy went on, the polls showed that
a majority of black people were against the removal of the
Confederate flag!!!!!!!!!!! So, what in the world, is all of
this Liberal brouhaha about the flag (sic?) all
about????? You don't think that the Liberals are using red
herrings and demagoguery (sic?) do you? Perhaps they are.
Many black Republicans that I listen to, often observe that
the Democrats play the race card to the
detriment of our society.
Something to think about.
|
Date:
Unknown
From: Matt
Wilensky, Ph.D.
Reply-To: m wilensky@hotmail.com
Former
Milwaukeean & UWM Psychology student
Clinical Psychologist
Recovering Socialist
[Message 2 from Matt]
From:
Matt
Wilensky
Date: 3/18/00 2:00:37 PM
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
hey Mike
»»
thanks for the update...I'm just back from N. Ontario, hanging w/
Jeff
Hinich, & we touched now & then on the old
days...actually we had a rerun of sorts recently, w/ a bag
ship in port, as you
probably heard...I thought I e-mailed my congratulations
& thanks quite some time ago, when I initially found out
about your site...I enjoyed looking around.....be nice to
see you one of these days....
best,
Harvey
|
Date:
Tue, 29 Aug 2000
From: Harvey
Taylor
<htaylor@wi.rr.com>
To: Mike Zetteler <mzetteler@wi.rr.com>
Subject: Re:
Mike Zetteler's Site
[Zonyx Report] Update:
www.oocities.org/mikelzet
Milwaukee
Riverwest resident
Longshoreman
Poet & musician
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Index [Bottom]
|
[New,
From
Jeanne (Scheeler )]
»»
Mikelowitz was
an Eastern European type cat.
He always wore his hat,
even in summer.
He cooked his own food,
mostly beef.
He liked to look at naked girl cats,
In cat, or on the net,
Whatever.
He fed beef dinners to his various
girl-cat friends.
He liked his life and
he should have.
But he said little about it,
or anything.
--miloscz, 7/11/2000
|
From:
Jeanne [deleted]
To: mikelz@hotmail.com
Date:
Tue,
11 Jul 2000
Former
Milwaukeean & UWM student
Florida resident
UFOlogy buff
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
[New,
From Jeanne]
»»
MIKEL: In fact, I don't find the naked
dancers described on the Ozaukee Press page to be
"risible." In fact, just the opposite. See usage
note in Webster, 9th ed., at the "risibility"
entry: "'Our risibilities support us as we skim over
the surface of a deep issue'
--J. A. Pike.". . . .
. . . .The following extracts from Catherine
MacKinnon's *Toward a Feminist Theory of the State*
(Harvard University Press, 1989) may clarify for you the
difference between "prudery" and a feminist
interpretation of pornography. Following that are some
extracts from the Marxist art critic John
Berger's book *Another Way of Seeing* and additional
extracts from a filmmaker, a poet, and a revolutionary
philosopher, to perhaps help you to no longer confound the
Counter Culture's progressive critique of modern American
society with what you call "the age of topless and
bottomless entertainment."
--miloscz . . . .
. . . .[It's not by accident, Mikel, that you
so carefully represent yourself as the *viewer* of the naked
dancer in Ozaukee
County. Read your "report" and you will
see the effort you make to position yourself this way. You
want to be, and you try to make yourself, the arbiter of
everything you "report" on in this article,
including the view the reader should take away concerning
who's entitled to what views on others: i.e., the customer
willing to pay his way to watch the girl undress. But the
article really wasn't about legal issues, or the rights of
paying customers, or the way men get off on treating women
like objects, or what you seem to see as pornography's
contribution to the more libertine, self-indulgent aspects
of the "counter culture." It was all
about you and the sense of power you derived from looking at
her nude, from writing about yourself looking at her nude,
and from even getting to be the acting page editor or
whatever in laying out the article. You just want to lay out
the world from your own point of view, with yourself as
supreme Subject. You should read some feminist writing and
some existentialist philosophy too.--jm]. . . .
[Message 2 From Jeanne]
. . . .and 2) the consistent male
chauvinist tone and male chauvinist practices of most
of your website's references
to women. I really wanted to examine the latter issue in
detail. Perhaps my e-mail seemed to be an excessive
response, but I was using some of your gender/image usages
as a text from which to explore, with just a small portion
of MacKinnon's argument,
the issues of gender, pornography, and
power/dominance/violence
she raises. . . .
[Message 3 From Jeanne]
. . . .Perhaps the sexism expressed
in some items on your website is less
than blatant, Mikel. Perhaps my
sensitivity and reactions to it are more pronounced because
I directed a conference and edited a volume of papers a
decade or so ago on the gender and representation issues
raised by Berger, feminist film theorists, and
others concerned with this problem. . . .
. . . .And perhaps what you see as my
extreme reactions to sexism on your website partake of my
being very put-out by your frequent disparaging references
to my use of [a prescribed medication] and what you think of
as its dehumanizing effects. . . .
[Message 4 From Jeanne]
. . .
.ACTUALLY, ALMOST EVERY REFERENCE YOU MAKE TO WOMEN, EITHER
ON THE WEBSITE OR IN CORRESPONDENCE, REPRESENTS THEM AS
"NAKED" (REMEMBER THE STUFF YOU WROTE ABOUT
PUTTING UP ON YOUR SITE NUDE PICTURES OF YOUR
GIRLFRIENDS?) AND SEXUAL, AND NOTHING ELSE. REMEMBER
THE 'NAKED HIPPIE CHICKS' IN YOUR 'HISTORY OF THE EAST SIDE,' REPRESENTED
AS GETTING IT ON IN THE OFFICES OF SUBCULTURE NEWSPAPERS?
AND THE NAKED DANCER, AND THE FOLKSINGER THAT YOU HAD TO DESCRIBE IN TERMS
OF HER PHYSICAL ATTRACTIVENESS EVEN THOUGH YOUR COLLEAGUES
ON THE NEWSPAPER DISAPPROVED OF NEEDLESS REFERENCES TO THE
PHYSICAL APPEARANCE OF WOMEN IN COPY?. . . .
. . . .I
STAND BY MY READING OF YOUR REVIEW AND THE AFTERMATH AT THE PAPER,
IN
WHICH YOU WERE ASKED TO REMOVE THE REFERENCES TO THE
SINGER'S PHYSICAL QUALITIES BEFORE YOUR COLLEAGUES WOULD
AGREE TO PUBLISH THE REVIEW. WHY COULDN'T YOU DO THIS? WHAT
POINT WERE *YOU* TRYING TO MAKE?. . . .
|
Date:
Fri, 29 Sep 2000
From:
jeanne
[deleted]
To: Mike
Zetteler
Subject:
Re:
Updated Web Site
(Zonyx Report)
Reply-To: [deleted]
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
[Message 2 From Jeanne]
Date:
Mon, 9 Oct 2000
From: jeanne [deleted]
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com,
Subject: Re:
Jeanne's right about this
(--Phil): (No, she's not --Mike Z.)
Reply-To: [deleted]
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
[Message 3 From Jeanne]
Date:
Fri, 13
Oct 2000
From: jeanne [deleted]
To:
Mike Zetteler
Cc: [deleted]
Subject: Re: My chauvinist web site &
other sins
Reply-To:
[deleted]
Return
to Top
Index [Bottom]
[Message 4 From Jeanne]
From:
jeanne
Reply-To: [deleted]
To: mikelz@hotmail.com
Subject: Re:
Louise, G. M. Hopkins,
porn, lovebugs. . .
Date:
Tue, 17 Oct
2000
Return to Top
Index [Bottom]
|
mike,
»»
had
a bit of time to read more of your culture
memories...reading Barbara's
recollection of getting high blew me back in time -- seems
as though you have added more since I first looked at it --
very nice.
about the randy anderson shooting --
have you ever followed up what happened to the other YIP person, I
believe it was Don Rubin? The last I heard he was living on
the West Bank --
[New
Message from George]
. .
. . Don Rubin was the other person shot in the
back, but unlike [Randy] Anderson, he lived.
I met him when I was a student at MATC -- a very
quiet person, he would not talk about that night until
almost a year had gone by and we had become somewhat of
friends. From what I remember, he believes it was in large
part a police set up-- with Schmidt the one
pushing for the fire bombing, which I believe was suspected
at the time. Rubin kept a low profile because he and his
family sought and won a pardon from the Governor. Don
eventually settled on the West Bank with his
wife( not a Jew) and that is the last I have heard from him.
Still I think his story could fill in some details about the
YIP commune-
|
From: "george r.
johnson"
<gjohnson@epd.engr.wisc.edu>
To:
<mzetteler@wi.rr.com>
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2002
Subject: randy anderson
UWM graduate, former POST editor
Former Waukesha Freeman photographer
Milwaukee's
first head shop owner
Lecturer: UW-Engineering College
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[New, from D. J. Zetteler, The Netherlands] »»
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[New, from Ralph Larsen]
»»
Hi Mike.
I
wanted to make some comments about your web site, but I just
haven't had the time. I do have some news for you, I
ran into George Johnson last week.
I saw him in Madison while walking down the
street. He looks great and seems to be successful. He
has an interesting tail to tell- but I'll let him tell it.
His email address is: gjohnson@epd.engr.wisc.edu
Part of his story is in his
address. Although I knew nothing about his whereabouts, he
knew what I was doing, but more about that later.
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Hello,
Mike:
»»
Please think of this as a thank you note. I
discovered your website, not while
searching for Zetteler, that
would have been too easy. I was getting creative and
looking for de Bourghelles and found
it!
My name is Cynthia and I am
your second cousin once removed, i.e., your grandfather Charles Elias Gabriel
Zetteler was the brother of my
great-grandfather, Frederick Tobias Zetteler
III.
I want to thank you for all the information you
provided from Wilfred.
I had the line back to Wijnand
Johannes and Anna Jacoba Helman (Peters)
Zetteler, and the information from Wilfred pushed it
back two more generations and explained why the Zettelers
were in Holland with a non-Dutch name. I have
drafted a letter to Wilfred with all my questions
on his information.
I hate to be greedy, but do you have any
information on the Wahlfahrt family (or Walfarth,
Wolfarth, Walfart, etc. etc.)? Anna
Walfahrt married Charles Gabriel Elias the
first. I know her father, Rudolf, (who
fought in the Civil War) was from Switzerland, but that's
about it. I am putting together a family history for
my mother and I have almost nothing on them. Her side
of the family seems to be fraught with genealogical brick
walls.
I do have information I can share: I
have information on Sarah Jacoba Smith's family and
a little on the Zettelers who fought
in the Civil War.
Just out of curiosity, what languages did your grandfather
speak. I'm assuming Dutch, but others
as well?
Thank you again for the information. Look
forward to hearing from you
Cynthia
Gruver
[New
Message from Cynthia]
. . . .Yes, I write travel mostly
and the site I write for at the moment is www.igougo.com and I write under the guide name Peregrine. I've
just posted text and pictures about the Open Space in Albuquerque, where
I spent a lot of free time and Chuck
(husband) gives walking tours,
or did, I think he's moved on to running conservation
organizations at the moment. Ah, to be retired and do
whatever you damn please.
At the moment I'm working up a series of one
day itineraries for people who are visiting Santa Fe for IgoUgo.
It's fun, but it doesn't pay.
Unfortunately.
By the way, Mother remembers your father and aunts. I guess as kids the cousins got
together now and again . . .
|
Cynthia Gruver
Arizona
Resident
Travel Writer
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Hi Mike,
»»
What a nice surprise. I was just beginning to think
that you just weren't interested in family
history. The two of my sisters who are living
down here aren't.
I'm a relative newcomer to genealogy, having
just started about a year ago. As you mentioned, my
paternal grandmother was Harriet Katherine Zetteler. She
died in 1938, when I was
ten. She was married to Jesse Paul
Arnold on April 18, 1900 in Milwaukee. She
was born in Oconomowoc, WI on Jan. 26, 1876. Interestingly,
the name on her birth certificate is Emma.
I have quite a bit of information on her
father, Fredrick Tobias Zetteler, which I
found in the Milwaukee County Historical Society when I was
up there last summer. They have an extensive Civil War
library. I also have copies of some of his personal
papers that I'd seen years earlier, and which were handed
down through the family. My brother had them and gave
them to one of my sister's daughters. She sent me
copies of them. I'm working on a sort of faux
computer, so I can't e-mail them, but I would be happy to
send you copies of any or all the information I have.
There were at least three Zettelers who served
in the Civil War.
Well, back to the family. Grandmother had
five children: Edwin, who died in
1926, from tuberculosis. He was
married and had two children, Edwin and Marylou? I'll
have to check on that. Then came Myrtle, who married
Frank Ryan, moved to Rochester,
NY, and had eight children, Paul,
Francis, George, Patricia, Joseph, David, Mary Lou and Joan
Carol. Next was my Dad, Jesse
Paul Arnold, but known as Paul. He
had five children, [starting with] Dennis Wayne, who passed
away last year at age 77 of a heart attack.
I'm the second, age 75 in July. I married
a Native American in 1946. We had ten
children. The first was Judith, (as opposed
to Judy as I am called.) She is a
lawyer, has her PhD, is currently teaching law at the U. of
Arkansas and is in the process of writing a book
about one of the black lawyers who took part in the Little Rock School
situation.
We had a son, Richard, who was
drowned in an irrigation canal in Arizona.
Next was Cynthia (Cindy), who went to
the U. of IL, and is currently a supervisor at
the Illinois Dept. of Employment (Unemployment
Bureau). She lives in Gurnee, IL.
Next is Paul, who went to UW-Madison and works
as a computer consultant for the U. of
Madison.
Next is Dawn, who is a
special ed. teacher in Waukegan, IL.
Greg is next. He works for Western Plow
Co. in Milwaukee.
Kate's next. Her name is Kathleen, and she's a
nurse and trained as a midwife, looking for a midwifery
(like that word) position in Milwaukee. She is currently
working as a nurse at the Menomonee
Falls Hospital.
Craig is next. He is currently
self-employed, designing computer pages (?), working mostly
for non-profit organizations.
Linda does framing and works at various
other jobs.
Nancy works variously at repairing and
upgrading houses and working in restaurants.
All seem reasonably happy with what they're
doing.
My next sister is Nancy, who is
married to a Lutheran minister. They seem to enjoy
their once or twice yearly trips to Russia to help
potential ministers, there.
Then, my sister Donna who is
retired from the Milwaukee Post Office, as was my
grandfather, my father, my brother, my cousin, Jan and I.
Bonnie is the
youngest. She hasn't worked outside the home since
soon after she was married.
Next in Grandma's family is Aunt
Harriet. She had two sons, Dick and Dan Klenz. Dick
is interested in genealogy. The youngest, and the only
one still alive, is Aunt Dorothy. She
is a great source of family information, and most of what
she has told me has checked out.
I guess I've told you more than you wanted to
know, so, I'll sign off.
Nice to talk to you,
Judy
|
From: lewisjgrandma@webtv.net
(Judith Lewis)
Date: Sat, 13 Apr
2002
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com
Subject: Branch of family tree
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[New, from Cynthia d'Este (Coffin)]
»»
Excellent web site. Will take me a while to
scrutinize. . . .
Who knew then that you'd be the historian of
us all! You look like the senior statesman. . . .
More, later . . .
cynthia d.
[More
from Cynthia]
»»
. . .
describing my past 30 years. They've
been a lot more fun and interesting than I'd imagined they'd
be. Haven't
begun to write about those, but maybe I should!
I'll keep in touch. More power to you in
keeping us all connected. You have
NO idea what a synapse charge it was to see the names
"Lance Barlow" and
"Jeannie Scheeler."
And
Roger! [Christeck] Dear
Curmudgeon! We should
have a huge
reunion under the Brise
Soliel [right] one of these
days!
Yers, in Palmyra . . .
cdE
|
From: Destino@aol.com
Date: Wed, 31 Jul 2002
Subject: Excellent web site!
To: mzetteler@wi.rr.com
Cynthia d'Este [Coffin]
Former UWM
student & East Side dweller &
Cheshire [UWM] staffer
Retired corporate headhunter
"Poet of the Prairie" -- CNB-Scene
Profile
Small Press Publisher
Reiki
Practitioner
Former San Francisco resident
Palmyra, WI resident
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[New,
from Barbara
Gibson]
»»
Julia just
sent me your website, which
she had gotten from Rose Rinder,
I think. My God, Mike,
you've done a massive job of reporting the history of
that place, those times! It's really incredible,
and I hope people appreciate it. I do, though
it's a little overwhelming, for one thing, and I'm not
sure I want to remember all that, for another.
What the heck are you doing these
days? Does it say, somewhere, in all the many
links? As for me, I live in Olympia
Washington where I've lived since '85, and I'm
retired from my job as a mental health counselor at The Evergreen State College. I'm
"married" to a woman, Carol,
and we live together with two cats. I still write
poetry,
believe it or not. Do you? What's the
point, I ask myself at times. Bush is getting
ready to blow up the world and I'm writing
about the maple trees in Michigan or something.
Well, there's much more I could say
about that.
And
about many other things. I saw Morgan this
summer, briefly, after several years. That was
good. Julia and Lucy are well and happy, Julia in L.A., Lucy
in Boston. Geez... I'm 72 years old.
I got a new haircut this morning, and I can't tell
whether it makes me look even more ancient, or whether
it helps pep me up. Actually, I'm pretty peppy
as is.
It would be fun to hear from
you. Take care. And thanks again for
all the work you did to put that stuff together.
Is it a book? It should be! Love, Barbara
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MIKE!!!!!
»»
It's me, Morgan!
I
have just seen you, heard you, read your lively words about Milwaukee in the 1960s
-- sent to me by daughter Julia in Hollywood, who received it from her friend
Rose Rinder in Milwaukee. You
can proudly say like Ishmael (the
one in MOBY DICK), "I alone
have survived to tell the tale!" (Is that what he
said?) I plunged right into your sea of countercultural
nostalgia, just about drowning. I clicked on links right
and left, reading most of the night, over my head, till I
collapsed in bed, and this morning decided instead of trying to
read everything at one sitting I will savor those adventures a
little at a time, a day at a time, with your voice echoing in
every word.
How did you do all this? Your work is
remarkable, and not just because of of its many tickets for
ego-trips, but because you have invented a new Milwaukee art form for a unique and
fascinating chunk of its history -- one of the most innovative
websites that I've encountered. I'm interested in your
family record also. What next?
To bring you up to date:
For 24 years I've been married to Keiko Matsui Gibson (whom you met when we
gave that poetry reading at UWM),
who teaches modern literature, gender studies, and cross-cultural
subjects. That's longer than I was married to Barbara. We have a 16 year old son Christopher Gibson (aka Matsui So) who is in 10th grade at
Yokohama International School. He's bilingual, excels at
playing the cello (at it for more than ten years), loves studying
Japanese and western history (having just written a paper on
Chinese revolutionary history), writes occasional poetry and
fiction for the school's literary magazine and articles for the
school newspaper, also interested in math and the sciences,
discusses politics and other news with me, rebels against me but
is polite to others.
I teach at two Japanese universities and for
three years have been writing PHILOSOPHIZING
IN THE VOID, a column in most issues
of KYOTO JOURNAL (but will henceforth instead contribute separate
articles and reviews as contributing editor). I'll e-mail
you later some writings that I've got in my iBook.
Meanwhile, you can find some of my work and Keiko's online:
My Revolutionary
Rexroth: Poet of East-West Wisdom (a book that was
originally published and won a Choice Award)
is at
<www.thing.net/~grist/ld/rexroth/gibson.htm>
(webmaster is Karl Young from
Milwaukee, living in Kenosha); and Karl's Light & Dust Portable Anthology of Poetry: Morgan’s One
Looks at One is
at <www.thing.net/~grist/lnd/mgibson.htm>
and Keiko's How
Do You Like America and Other Poems is at
<www.thing.net/~grist/l&d/lgibson.htm>.
Some of our
poems are also in The Plaza:
<http://u-kan.co.jp>.
Family news:
After counseling students at Evergreen
College for many years, Barbara
continues to live in Olympia, Washington, and writes plays about the goddess Sophia.
After being a special effects producer
for 15 years or so, Julia
continues to live in Hollywood with TV producer Aaron
Lipstadt and their teenage son Isaak, with her
daughter Miranda (born in the Milwaukee Yippie Commune) and HER son Charlie living nearby.
Lucy is a computer scientist working on artificial
intelligence for Ray Kurzweil (said to be the greatest inventor since Edison)
in Boston.
I was sad to hear of the death of Ed Burton. How
are his wife, daughter, and others in his family? I asked Vicki (in a letter
after his death) what might become of all of their publications,
might a university library become their home, etc., but have not
received a reply. Are there any 60's archives at UW-Milwaukee or UW-Madison for
collections such as yours, Ed's, Karl Young's, etc.? What
are plans for your own collection in the future? I've been
wondering what to do with what's left of my poetry collection and
correspondence with many poets, which are housed in Michigan.
Have you recently been in touch with
Karl or Antler and Jeff Poniewaz or others I might know in Milwaukee?
I'd love to hear from you and will offer
you any information I can about those exciting years in Milwaukee. You
have certainly done a conscientious, exciting, and imaginative
job! I wish we could meet.
Morgan Gibson
[More from
Morgan
Gibson]
»»
Mike!
I just read your interview with Paul Goodman. I don't
remember having read it before! You refer to Barbara giving the
party, as if I weren't there. Strange. I remember him
being in our home for several discussions with students, at
least one involving a gay student writer whose name I've
forgotten, who turned on Paul. Your paraphrasing is
accurate, flowing, and revealing of his mood, attitude, and
personality. Bravo! I remembered that hippies
disappointed him, creating a junk culture instead of the
utopia he wished. It's sad that his work has almost
totally faded away, even in the neo-beat revival movements,
which bore at least one City Lights editor, who
interviewed me about Rexroth. I wouldn't
say that Paul is a great short story writer, but THE EMPIRE
CITY is a work of genius, and I remember it with
excitement and immense admiration, though I haven't read a
page of it in 30 years. But then I read little
fiction. It's more a product of an erudite poetic
imagination. Barbara and I interviewed him at length about
it, in a piece published in Leroi Jones' KULCHUR magazine
before Leroi became Amiri. I
revered Paul, but his failures surprised me: his blind spots
concerning women's liberation, black liberation most of
all. But we were all lucky to know him for a
time. I wonder what he would be into today?
. . . As for your
story about Donnie, it is an
admirable piece of realistic writing, with vivid local
color, and some of the best black-white dialogue that I've
ever read! (But don't forget, I've never read as much
fiction as poetry, not as much fiction as you.)
Your story swept me back into the Milwaukee ghetto. . . .Beverly Pitts' organ!
. . . But just as [Paul] Goodman
criticized hippie literature and art for being old fashioned
stylistically, I must honestly confess that your
realism is a throwback to a much earlier stage of
literature. Of course it was written long ago, but
even then your . . . realistic style seemed inappropriate
for the consciousness of the era.
Copper Canyon
Press has just published the first collected poems of
Kenneth Rexroth -- everything
but translations -- which I am about to review for KYOTO JOURNAL (back issues of which
for several years contain a lot of my columns and reviews).
|
We live at 3-17-604 Sakashita-cho,
Isogo-ku, Yokohama-shi 235-0003 Japan. Our telephone/fax
number is (045) 761-9223. (From
North America dial 011-81-45-761-9223).
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Hi Mike,
Yes, it is I, Cathy Gubin
who worked on the Bugle in
Milw. with Marty Racine. I have lived in France for the last 18
years. I am an International Editor for a top
five IT Consulting firm. Marty Racine works for
the Houston Chronicle.
I don't have the time right now to look into your site,
but can do that later in January.
Cheers,
Cathy
Gubin
|
Former East Sider
& Bugle-American
Staff Photographer & Layout Artist
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[Your Comments Here!]
|
COMING SOON:
[your
name here!]
|
Index of
Contributors, A -- L:
Coffin, Cynthia [Cynthia d'Este]
Drouin, Marcia [Marcia Smith]
d'Este,
Cynthia [Cynthia Coffin]
Gibson, Barbara [Barbara O'Mary]
Gibson, Morgan
Gruver, Cynthia [Zetteler
Genealogy]
Gubin, Cathy
Johnson, George R.
Larsen, Ralph
Lewis, Judy [Zetteler
Genealogy]
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Index
of Contributors, M -- Z:
Ollman, Rick
Regano, Teri
Rey, Diane M.
Scheeler, Jeanne
Smith, Marcia [Marcia Drouin]
Taylor, Harvey
Titus, Harry
Wilensky, Matt
Wroblewski, Phil
Zetteler, D. J. [Zetteler Genealogy]
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