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Woodstock artifacts in the fabric of N.Y. history

Associated Press

Steve Shashok was a lanky, longhaired 21-year-old when he went to Woodstock. Through three days of music and mud, he wore the same bell-bottoms covered with a crazy quilt of colored and corduroy patches.

The pants are now history -- officially.

The multi-patched jeans are being displayed at the New York State Museum among dozens of evocative artifacts from the 1969 concert: ticket stubs, a leather headband, programs, a New York Daily News headlined “Traffic Uptight at Hippiefest” and a conga drum. The artifacts came from a few dozen of the 400,000 attendees who answered a recent call to lend personal bits of hippie history for the exhibit.

The thought of Woodstock in a museum might send baby boomers off to count gray hairs. But the concert was an iconic event in New York’s history, museum Director Cliff Siegfried said. And museum curator Ron Burch said it meets a crucial acid test of historical events: People remember where they were when they heard about it.

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The museum put out a call for Woodstock memorabilia in March to augment an exhibit by concert photographer Elliott Landy. Along with a bunch of tickets, the museum also received a few dozen items from the army of former young people who showed up on Max Yasgur’s farm in Bethel, N.Y., for a long weekend in August 1969.

Behind every item was a story. Shashok, then a college student in the Albany area, hopped in a friend’s car wearing the bell-bottoms with the hand-stitched patches. He watched Jefferson Airplane in the pants.

In the years since, as Shashok grew less lanky and began wearing his hair shorter, he still could not part with the trousers.

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“In my lifetime, we’ll probably keep them at home so they can be paraded out every now and again” he said.

Also set for display is a yellowed, mud-flecked copy of Norman Mailer’s book “Armies of the Night,” which details a protest march on Washington. The book came to Woodstock jammed in the pocket of 14-year-old Robert Swidler, a New York City boy summering nearby.

It was Swidler’s first concert, and he thought every concert would be just like it. He read the book between acts.

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The most conspicuous piece is a blanket-sized montage painting heavy on iridescent orange and featuring Jimi Hendrix and corporate-looking men in suits. Julie Lomoe came up from Manhattan to enter her painting in a competition at the concert and won second prize.

Lomoe, 62, won $50 or $75, she can’t remember. But she does remember the crush of the crowd and the nonstop music -- particularly The Who’s predawn performance of “Tommy.”

“By the time they finished the set, the sun had come up. I remember Roger Daltrey was in white leather,” she said. “It was all very dramatic and beautiful.”

Lomoe writes now, and her life inevitably changed over the decades. Swidler is a lawyer for a healthcare company with a 14-year-old son of his own. Shashok works in the museum’s audio visual department.

The most abrupt post-Woodstock change might have been David Beemer’s, who helped figure out latrines and other details as assistant director of operations. His loan to the museum included a pay stub from Woodstock Ventures Inc.

Beemer wrote a recollection describing how he stayed on the job for a week cleaning up after the concert. “Then I got drafted in the U.S. Army,” he wrote. “What an ending.”

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