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Woodstock story part 3 |
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Woodstock Ventures billed the concert as a "weekend in the country" -
temporary commune. The ads ran in the newspapers, both establishment and
underground, and on radio stations in Los Angeles, San Francisco, New
York, Boston, Texas and Washington, D.C. A concert ticket also bought
a campsite. But even a commune requires some kind of organization. In
late June, Goldstein called in the Hog Farm.
The Hog Farm started out as a communal pig farm in California; its members
eventually bought land next to a Hopi Indian reservation in New Mexico.
Its leader was a skinny, toothless hippie whose real name was Hugh Romney.
He was a one-time beatnick comic who had changed his name to Wavy Gravy
and held the wiseguy title of "Minister of Talk". "We brought in the Hog
Farm to be our crowd interface," Goldstein explained. "We needed a specific
group to be the exemplars for all to follow. We believed that the idea
of sleeping outdoors under the stars would be very attractive to many
people, but we knew damn well that the kind of people who were coming
had never slept under the stars in their lives. We had to create a circumstance
where they were cared for."
The Wallkill Zoning Board of Appeals officially banned Woodstock on July
15, 1969. To the applause of residents, board members said that the organizer's
plans were incomplete. They also said outdoor toilets, such as those to
be used at the concert, were illegal in Wallkill. Two weeks earlier, the
town board had passed a law requiring a permit for any gathering of more
than 5,000 people. "The law they passed excluded one thing and one thing
only - Woodstock," said Al Romm, then-editor of The Times Herald-Record,
which editorialized against the Wallkill law. Wallkill Supervisor Jack
Schlosser denied that this was the intent.
The Wallkill board may have done Woodstock Ventures a favor. Publicity
about what had happened reaped a bonanza of interest. Besides, if Woodstock
had been staged in Wallkill, Lang said, the vibes would either have squelched
the show or turned it into a riot. "I didn't want cops in gas masks showing
up, and that was the atmosphere there," Lang said. "With all the tensions
around it, it wouldn't have worked." Another Woodstock Ventures member,
Lee Blumer, remembered the threats made in town. "They said they were
going to shoot the first hippie that walked into town," said Blumer.
Kodak wanted cash, but the movie crew got no money upfront for film. So
Wadleigh pulled $50,000 out of savings, both from his personal account
and an account for his independent film business. During July, Wadleigh
was out in Wyoming filming a movie about mountain climbing. When promoters
lost the Wallkill site, Wadleigh cringed. "I had this feeling of absolute
terror that it wasn't going to come off," Wadleigh said. "That feeling
that someone could pull the plug out on us didn't go away until the music
started."

Elliot Tiber read about Woodstock getting tossed out of Wallkill. Tiber's
White Lake resort, the El Monaco, had 80 rooms, nearly all of them empty,
and keeping it going was draining his savings. But for all of Tiber's
troubles, he had one thing that was very valuable to Woodstock Ventures.
He had a Bethel town permit to run a music festival. "I think it cost
$12 or $8 or something like that," Tiber said."It was very vague. It just
said I had permission to run an arts and music festival. That's it." The
permit was for the White Lake Music and Arts Festival, a very, very small
event that Tiber had dreamed up to increase business at the hotel. "We
had a chamber music quartet, and I think we charged something like two
bucks a day," he said. "There were maybe 150 people up there."
Tiber called Ventures, not even knowing who to ask for. Lang got the message
and went out to White Lake the next day, which probably was July 18, to
look at the El Monaco. Tiber's festival site was 15 swampy acres behind
the resort. "Michael looked at that and said, 'This isn't big enough,'"
Tiber recalled. "I said, 'Why don't we go see my friend Max Yasgur? He's
been selling me milk and cheese for years. He's got a big farm out there
in Bethel.'" While Lang waited, Tiber telephoned Yasgur about renting
the field for $50 a day for a festival that might bring 5,000 people.
"Max said to me, 'What's this, Elliot? Another one of your festivals that
doesn't work out?'" Tiber said.
Yasgur met Lang in the alfalfa field. This time, Lang liked the lay of
the land. "It was magic," Lang said. "It was perfect. The sloping bowl,
a little rise for the stage. A lake in the background. The deal was sealed
right there in the field. Max and I were walking on the rise above the
bowl. When we started to talk business, he was figuring on how much he
was going to lose in this crop and how much it was going to cost him to
reseed the field. He was a sharp guy, ol' Max, and he was figuring everything
up with a pencil and paper. He was wetting the tip of his pencil with
his tongue. I remember shaking his hand, and that's the first time I noticed
that he had only three fingers on his right hand. But his grip was like
iron. He's cleared that land himself."

Yasgur was known across Sullivan County as a strong-willed man of his
word. He'd gone to New York University and studied real estate law, but
moved back to his family's dairy farm in the '40s. A few years later,
Yasgur sold the family farm in Maplewood and moved to Bethel to expand.
Throughout the '50s and '60s, Yasgur slowly built a dairy herd. By the
time the pipe-smoking Yasgur was approached by Woodstock Ventures, he
was the biggest milk producer in Sullivan County, and the Yasgur farm
had delivery routes, a massive refrigeration complex and a pasteurization
plant. The 600 acres that Ventures sought were only part of the Yasgur
property, which extended along both sides of Route 17B in Bethel.
Within days after meeting Yasgur, Lang brought the rest of the Ventures
crew up in eight limousines; by then, Yasgur was wise to Woodstock, and
the price had gone up considerably. Woodstock Ventures kept all the negotiations
secret, lest it repeat what had happened in Wallkill. At some point during
the talks, Tiber and Lang went to dinner at the Lighthouse Restaurant,
and Italian place just down Route 18B from El Monaco in White Lake. That's
where the news leaked out. "While we were paying the check, the radio
was on in the bar. The radio station out there, WVOS, announced that the
festival was going to White Lake, " Tiber said. "The waiters or the waitresses
must have called the radio station. We were just in shock. The bar was
now empty. Michael just had a blank look. We all went into shock." On
July 20, 1969, the world was talking about the first man to walk on the
moon. But conversation in Bethel centered on this "Woodstock hippie festival."
"I was used to fights, but I wasn't ready for this one, " Tiber said.
The Woodstock partners have since admitted that they were engaged in creative
deception. They told Bethel officials that they were expecting 50,000
people, tops. All along they knew that Woodstock would draw far, far more.
"I was pretty manipulative," Lang said. "The figure at Wallkill was 50,000,
and we just stuck with it. I was planning on a quarter-million people,
but we didn't want to scare anyone."
Ken Kesey's farm in Orefon was overrun with hippie acolytes. Kesey lived
in Pleasant Hill, which became home base for his Merry Pranksters, the
creators of the original Acid Tests in San Francisco. Kesey had bought
the farm with the earnings from his two bestsellers, "One Flew Over the
Cuckoo's Nest" (1962) and "Sometimes a Great Notion" (1964). The fashion
of the day was to share and share alike. But the horde was starting to
bother even a founder of the counterculture. 
As the Apollo 11 astronauts were strolling the Sea of Tranquility on July
20, the Pranksters were hearing from Wavy Gravy, whom they knew from the
Acid Tests. The Hog Farmers said they were getting $1,700 to gather as
many people together as possible and get them to Bethel. "Kesey was glad
to get rid of everybody," said Ken Babbs, then 33 and the leader of the
Pranksters' Woodstock squad. Babbs packed 40 hippies into five school
buses. One was "The Bus" - the one later made famous by author Tom Wolfe
in "The Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test." The Bus had a custom, psychedelic
paint job and a Plexiglas bubble on top, and it was packed with sound
gear. Its destination sign read: "Further." "While Neil Armstrong was
taking a giant leap for mankind, we were starting to take a giant leap
for Woodstock," Babbs said.
Max Yasgur had two concerns. "He thought a grave injustice had been done
in Wallkill. And he wanted to make sure that he got the $75,000 before
some other dairy farmer did," Rosenman said. "They were in no particular
order. I'm not sure which was more important to him. Having said that,
I'll say this about Max: He never hit us up for another dime after we
paid him. I remember that every time we went over there, Max would hand
you one of those little cartons of chocolate milk. Every time. We ended
up with all these cartons of milk around the office."
Contracts for the use of land surrounding Yasgur's parcel ended up costing
Ventures another $25,000. " We could have bought the land for what we
rented it for," Lang said. Meanwhile, hand-lettered signs were being put
up in the town of Bethel. They read: "Buy No Milk. Stop Max's Hippy Music
Festival."
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Woodstock story part 3 |
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