1392 lines
77 KiB
Plaintext
1392 lines
77 KiB
Plaintext
Newsgroups: alt.angst.xibo.sex,alt.mud,alt.religion.kibo
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From: jfurr@nyx.cs.du.edu (JKF)
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Subject: Xibo's Vacation (LONG) [Repost]
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Message-ID: <1992Dec20.032721.23591@mnemosyne.cs.du.edu>
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Keywords: mud angst xibo tank girl
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Reply-To: xibo@fido.econ.arizona.edu
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Organization: Nyx, Public Access Unix @ U. of Denver Math/CS dept.
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Date: Sun, 20 Dec 92 03:27:21 GMT
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Lines: 1380
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Yes, Xibo knows I'm posting this. Send comments about the writing to Xibo
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at xibo@fido.econ.arizona.edu.
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By: xibo@fido.econ.arizona.edu (Mr. Coates)
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Date: 9 Apr 92 18:41:49 GMT
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Organization: Xibological Perimeter
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Several months ago, a few angst-list members were mulling over the idea of
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AngstCon III, where to have it, and when. It became quickly apparent that if
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we held it in Minneapolis, then the turnout would be pretty good, since five
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of the members live in that area. So a few arrangements were made, the date
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debated wildly, and eventually the weekend of March 27th was decided upon.
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I decided that since I was going to fly all the way out to Minneapolis from my
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humble abode in Tucson, I might as well see other parts of the midwest as
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well. Utilizing my knowledge that round-trip tickets don't have to be with
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the same city, I chose to visit Chicago, because it's a big famous city that
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I've never been to before. All I had to do was arrange to get from Chicago
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to Minneapolis on my own, via bus or with a friend.
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As it happened, I was able to convince Pope_751 to drive down from Milwau-
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kee, pick me up in Chicago, take me to Purdue for a couple days, and then
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drive me to Milwaukee, where I would meet up with another friend, Markian
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Gooley, who would then take me to Minneapolis, where I would do the
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AngstCon thing and then fly back home.
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The overall adventure took nine days, from Friday, March 20th to Sunday,
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March 29th. I planned to take a week off from work, but made no official
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arrangements with the department secretary, as I was rather displeased with
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having to work panic-level hours for a couple weeks, getting the RS/6000s
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back on their feet after they had been decimated by IBM's kludge-filled AIX
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3.2 upgrade. If you are considering doing this upgrade on your RS/6000,
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DON'T. If you are looking to hire someone who has experience managing
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RS/6000s, please hire me, I'm very underpaid currently.
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So, armed with airplane tickets, ride plans, and contingency plans, I ventured
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forth on my adventure into the great midwest. What follows is a short
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summary of my travels, along with some of the observations I made at the
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time.
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<page break>
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Friday, March 20th
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After two weeks of pure hell, the RS/6000s were rescued, and the laboratory
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had almost returned to business as usual. It was amazing that I was able to
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clear things up in that time, and leave for vacation with a clear conscience.
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Casually I packed my luggage, one really big suitcase with a week's worth of
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clothes and my camera, and my briefcase for carry-on entertainment, and
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"maps". These maps, for the most part, consisted of text descriptions of how
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to get here and there, which I had received via email. For entertainment I
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put the day's Wall Street Journal, my Game Boy (with Final Fantasy Legend II
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cartridge), and a paperback novel, "The Difference Engine" by Gibson and
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Sterling.
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It was a calm, sunny day, near 70, as I drove to the airport. I managed to get
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my car parked at the $2/day long-term parking area, check into the airport,
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and find my gate, all with no difficulty. I was really early so I treated
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myself to an expensive breakfast at the main restaurant in the airport.
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The flight to Chicago was non-stop, and only about three hours, which I
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thought was really short. It was a fairly modern plane, with phones in the
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back of the seats. For $2.00 per minute, you could make a phone call from
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30,000 feet. I was tempted to call my brother and tell him I was talking to
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him from a few miles in the air, but I decided against it.
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By some really strange act of fate, we flew over the Very Large Array. The
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pilot was pointing it out so that the people on the other side of the plane
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could see it. A few minutes after passing that, I looked down on the ground
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on my side of the plane, and saw a most amazing sight: Socorro, New Mexico,
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home of New Mexico Tech, where I went to college and suffered much angst
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and mental anguish. The college, which only has 1300 students, looked really
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small. I could see "M" mountain, the whole city, the Rio Grande, the explosive
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test sites... all at once, and it was quite miniature. It was comforting to know
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that I had risen so far above all that.
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It didn't take long to reach Chicago, touching down at O'Hare airport. I'd
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never been there before, but I knew it was supposed to be pretty big. At
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the gate, I looked around, but could see no sign of Wanderer. Damn, I
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thought, I sure hope he isn't late. He's the only person I knew in Chicago.
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So I stood around for a couple minutes, making sure he wasn't there, and
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then I proceeded to the baggage claim area, making sure he wasn't at the
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security checkpoint site, which was pretty big and partitioned off and
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confusing. He wasn't at the baggage claim area either, and my suitcase
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quickly arrived. So I looked around, confused, trying to figure out what to
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do. I called his house and left a message on his answering machine, but that
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didn't really cheer me up much. Finally, I decided that there was little I
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could really do, and I sat down and read some for a while. A few minutes
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later Wanderer runs in, explaining he's been waiting right outside, in a line of
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40 cars, and he was expecting me to walk out of the area and see him
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instantly. Yeah, right, I thought. All this just so we wouldn't have to walk
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to a parking area. *sigh*
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So I resolved to write up an airport protocol, in the hopes that in the future,
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people everywhere would use the protocol, and no more confusion would have
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to be suffered. [See Appendix B]
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We drove off, doing smalltalk about the weather, and freeways, and before we
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knew it we drove under a plane. It was the first time for both of us. How it
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happens is that O'Hare, like DFW, is so big that the freeway separates some of
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the landing strips from the gates, so there is a heavy-duty bridge the
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airplanes taxi over, to cross the freeway. Thus, with some lucky timing, you
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can drive underneath an airplane.
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Traffic was a bit congested, as it was rush hour by this time, so when the
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Burger King on top of the Freeway came into view, which I thought was a
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crazy place to put a Burger King, we exited and hid there for a while. There
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were arcade games, including my favorite, Smash TV. So we pumped a few
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quarters into the machine and won big money, big prizes (I even won a toast-
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er!). Then we killed more time by actually ordering some food.
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Wanderer's place was actually in a distant suburb, and the streets began to
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have familiar names. I was told that this was normal, as the suburbs of Los
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Angeles, Chicago, and New York City all connect, and we were currently
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somewhere in Utah. I nodded, wishing I had known this before, as I would
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have just driven instead of flying.
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I got to meet the cats, Boris and Rigel, both of which were very playful
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critters. Wanderer showed me his lovely abode, a nine foot square cardboard
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box that leaned against a supermarket. (It did have net-access, though.)
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After settling in, meeting one of his roommates and cute asian friend, we
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headed back out into the cold night of Chicago. The skyline was simply
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awe-inspiring, but unlike New York City, you could actually drive around
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without delays. We stopped to get some power steering fluid for the car,
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which was screeching a lot. My friend hadn't thought to do this before, as
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car maintenance isn't one of his strong points.
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The view of the Sears Tower at night was really impressive. Strangely, it
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didn't look as mind-boggingly tall as I had hoped; this may have been due to
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several nearby buildings being almost as tall. Still, with the night lights, it all
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looked very modern.
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We drove past downtown and on towards another person's apartment, where
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picked up someone else, and then we headed back downtown to go play Battle-
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Tech. This was a stripped-down version of Mech Warrior that had been
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reprogrammed to allow several players at once, using a network using
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LANtastic and run on 286es. We made several sniggering comments on how
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primitive the hardware was, and then played a couple games. The games were
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very expensive ($8) and only lasted a few minutes. The selling point was
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virtual reality, which is to say that they sit you in a box that blocks out
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external light, so all you see is several buttons and switches that do things
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only advanced players can guess at, a couple hand and foot controls, and the
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viewscreen. I guess if one wasn't aware of all the simple software tricks
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involved, it might have looked impressive. But personally I thought it was
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really lacking.
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After that we cruised through downtown streets that were made by famous by
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the movie, "The Blues Brothers". That was entertaining, and then we stopped
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by the Sears Tower so I could take some pictures of it from up close. We
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couldn't get in, for it was closed by that time. A persuasive black man tried
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very hard to sell us some gold chains; he was rather insistent, but I just
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blew him off entirely. The others actually tried to talk him away.
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After dropping off Wanderer's friend, we drove back, discussing along the
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way several ideas on how to improve on the BattleTech idea, how to rip it off
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entirely, and how to make a much better product. Sometimes, even now, I
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think about getting a few people together, and building a simulation involving
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space dogfights, but it would require about $50,000 investment to start.
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So I just laid down on the couch and let cats walk over me all night long.
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<page break>
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Saturday, March 21st
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When I woke up, there was snow on the ground. And it was falling lightly.
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Wanderer was still quite asleep, but I didn't feel at all tired anymore, so I
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played with the cats for a while. They were really cute, fun things. I'd
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never get one, though; you have to feed them regularly and clean their litter
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boxes and that's just too much of a hassle for me.
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I just laid there for a long time, and pretended to be asleep, and watched one
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of the roommate's girls leave, and then come back an hour later or so, as if to
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pretend she hadn't spent the night there. "That's odd..." I thought, and
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shrugged.
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So I pulled out my Game Boy and vegetated to that for a couple hours. It's
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not an exciting game, it's not even a good game. But it was better than
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watching the snow fall down. The icicles on the pine trees were really
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awesome, though.
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Eventually though, we did get back in gear, and walked out to the car, which
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was covered in snow. Actually all the cars were covered in snow, and if you
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didn't remember where you parked you car, you had to wipe snow off cars
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until you found yours, as they all looked alike, all the same size, all
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late-seventies boats.
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The drive back to town was a bit of a challenge; there was ice on the roads,
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which didn't please me at all. But for the most part the car stayed under
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control. We found Wax Trax, a famous alternative record outlet, without much
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difficulty. Parking was another matter, though; and when we travelled on a
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side street, which had not been salted, the car decided not to stop at the
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stop sign, and we slid into traffic. Whee. Amazingly, there was no collision.
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I really do not understand how people can live in a climate like that, where
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losing control of the car and endangering yourself to collisions every day is
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just a normal part of life. It's absurd!
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But we did make it Wax Trax, and they had a very impressive selection of
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CDs, but not as good as the Wax Trax in Denver. Actually, I thought the
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place was rather small, but I did find 9 CDs worth buying there. [See
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Appendix A]
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So, one of my big goals of the trip over with, I sat back in the car and
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relaxed, as the snowstorm got to be rather severe. We had planned to visit
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the Sears Tower, but after a few minutes of driving, it became obvious that
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the best thing to do would be to manage to make it back to secure shelter.
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Traffic was not pleasant, and road conditions were an unhappiness. I even
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got Wanderer to admit that he didn't like to drive when the weather was like
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this. Gee.
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We stopped at a grocery store and picked up a case of RC cola so we'd have
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stuff to drink. The roommates were watching "Robin Hood" with their girl-
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friends when we got back to the apartment. I ordered some pizza from Pizza
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Hut, and got chewed out by the roommates for not getting real Chicago-style
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pizza. Fuck 'em, I thought. I wanted pizza, and I didn't want to risk having
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it be weird. Pizza Hut is the same no matter what part of the country you're
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in.
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After the movie they put in "City Slickers". This was a very good movie; I
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didn't get a chance to see it when it was showing in the theaters. When it
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was over, I thought about it, and decided that my trip to the midwest was
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kind of like a reverse of the movie's concept. I'm from the desert southwest,
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and I'm spending my vacation visiting highly urban cities. So if there's a
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term for the reverse of a city slicker, then that would describe me on this
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trip.
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<page break>
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Sunday, March 22nd
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So after another morning of being walked up on by cats, vegging out to Game
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Boy, and contemplating the weather, things picked up again. We did the food
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thing, eating out at Arby's. Wanderer drove in circles in the parking lot five
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or six times, because he was bored.
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I was finally able to contact Pope_751, and convinced him to drive to Chicago
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and pick me up. Then it simply became a matter of killing the day off,
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because he needed to sleep first.
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So, what better way to kill time than to preview OS/2 2.0? A copy of one of
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the latest beta releases was on hand, so I got to play with it for a couple
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hours. Overall, it was much better in appearance than Windows 3.0, which
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impressed me, as IBM has a habit of making a lot of hype about things that
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are actually just so-so. But this is actually a better product than Windows,
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so I think IBM might actually have something here. Problem is, you need a
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386 and about six megs of RAM to run it effectively. Most people have a 386
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by now though, and it shouldn't be long before people clue in to the concept
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of buying more RAM.
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Still, I'd rather run UNIX. Even AIX, which is evil and buggy and had a
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disastrous upgrade recently that caused me a lot of grief. I just don't think
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having a cute graphical interface hiding command line prompts is enough
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reason to justify suffering all that overhead in making a multi-tasking
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DOS-compatible system. But, oh well.
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Wanderer had to take off to do some urgent work, so I was left to play with
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the computer and get in some net time, catching up with email and doing a
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little mudding. While I was mudding, I heard some sounds behind me, and I
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turned around to see a large iguana climbing the closet door.
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I stared at the iguana. It stared back at me. I nodded at it and went on
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typing away at the computer. It went on climbing the closet door. There was
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balance in the universe.
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So, the computer thing got old after a while. It got dark. I read some out of
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the novel I brought along, then vegged out some more to Game Boy. It wasn't
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the most exciting time, but it wasn't particularly stressful either, and pretty
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relaxing compared to my normal life.
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But alas, it had to happen, Pope_751 finally did arrive, driving a (Surprise!)
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late-seventies boat. We loaded the car and took off. His car a had a totally
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awesome sound system, it was capable picking up frequencies from 530 Khz to
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1600 Khz.
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So I became mesmerized by the sounds of talk radio and we drove in circles
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in the suburbs of Chicago, looking for a freeway. On the second time around
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we found one, and half an hour later, past a few toll booths, we were on our
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way to Indiana.
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We got gas near Gary, Indiana, and coke, too. As an added bonus, the car
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picked up a nail, and a while later we discovered that the tire had gone flat.
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This was a bummer, because it was cold outside, but we were near a rest
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area, so we parked there and checked it out. Simple flat, and there just
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happened to be a jack and a spare tire in the trunk. What luck!
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Only thing was, the jack was a seventies-style thing, that had to be assem-
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bled. But with a little effort we got the two-ton car jacked up and the tire
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swapped out. Yay. But that was all too easy, so the jack decided that it
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liked going up, but not down. We could not convince that jack to come down.
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It was so old and probably hadn't been used since the seventies, so some-
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thing stuck inside, and it wouldn't go down, no matter how we banged it,
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shifted the levers, or anything.
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I was not impressed. "Jack," I said menacingly, "you are not going to
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prevent me from getting to Purdue." And so I told Pope_751 to put the car
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in neutral. My, the jack didn't like that. The car rolled right off the thing,
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taking a piece of bumper off with it. We nodded and headed back on our
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way.
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<page break>
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Monday, March 23rd
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And so about an hour later we found our way through the dead trees and
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ancient houses to the thriving metropolis of West Lafayette, Indiana. We
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followed the fun directions that took us through a shopping center, to the
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secret hideout of Finrod & Tourmaline's apartment.
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A lightly bearded man with really long hair answered the door and welcomed
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us in; it was Bishop_III. On the couch was Tank Girl, his girlfriend, who was
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mudding away on a laptop that had been set on a chair. It was a friendly
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welcome, and we all gathered around Tank Girl to see what was happening on
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the mud. She announced to all our friends in our favorite corner of
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cyberspace that we had arrived. Riana, another mudder from Purdue, heard
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this and said she'd be right over to meet us. We all joked back and forth
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how Blackbird would kill her if she set foot in the apartment, as her reputa-
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tion was not the most favorable one. But Blackbird was elsewhere at this
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time, so nothing prevented her from coming on over.
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So half an hour later Riana arrived, although she was only a fifteen minute
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walk away. With her was Nilrem, her current boyfriend, and some other guy,
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whose name eludes me, thankfully, as he gave the appearance of a totally
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clueless loud-mouth, which, in fact, he turned out to be. I noticed Nilrem had
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a Battletech patch on his jacket, which I thought was cute. The three of
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them looked like they were from a local high school but I was told that they
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were indeed college students.
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Pope_751 and I were rather hungry at this point, and decided to get food,
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although it was late and the best place anyone could think of to eat was
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Denny's, which was fine with me. We took the three young'uns with us. On
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the way there it was explained to me that the people who work at Denny's
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don't appreciate students. Well fuck them! We were paying customers, and
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neither Pope_751 nor I were students.
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So I ordered eggs, because I love to eat eggs at Denny's. Everyone quickly
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ordered their stuff, except for the loudmouth, he bungled his order, talking
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confusedly with the waitress for five or ten minutes. I wanted to reach over
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and kill him, stab my fork in his eyeball repeatedly. Bastard. Hasn't he ever
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been to a Denny's before? Didn't he know how to order food? Christ!
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During the course of our meal, Riana explained to us how she found Nilrem at
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GenCon, like a lost puppy, and took him home with her. I didn't believe the
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story, but she stood by it, and everyone else seems to believe it's true.
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Nilrem talked at length about how he was kicked out of here and there and
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hitchhiked from place to place looking for a new home every few months. I
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just stared at him. Pope_751 bought a copy of USA Today and spent most of
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the time reading the articles.
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After a while, I began to realize that things were too absurd to obey the laws
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of any normal reality, and I decided to have fun with this. Riana was kind of
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cute, and playful, so I asked her if she'd like to have sex, in a low voice,
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while Nilrem was talking about something else. I don't think anyone else
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heard, except maybe Pope_751. She resisted this offer, making some excuse
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about Nilrem, so I offered to give him $20 to go entertain himself while we had
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fun together. I thought it was a reasonable offer, I mean hell, he could go to
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a movie and get popcorn and a drink and still have cash left over to play
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arcade games. Riana, however, turned this down.
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Maybe I should have been more generous.
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The sun came up and the kids began to whine about how tired they were, and
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Pope_751 decided to play the cruel part, and forced everyone to stay at
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Denny's an extra hour. But eventually even he got bored, so we drove back
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to the Purdue area, and dropped the kids off. And we didn't see any of them
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ever again. Yay.
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Pope_751 and I cruised around campus and to the brighter parts of West
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Lafayette, until we found ourselves overlooking the splendid view of several
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hill-sized heaps of rock that a local mill had deposited. We sat in admiration
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of this for a long time, it must have at least forty seconds, and then decided
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that this town really wasn't that interesting after all, and seeked entertain-
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ment elsewhere. This led us back to the apartment.
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Blackbird was there, doing something vaguely breakfast-like. No introductions
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were necessary, we all knew each so well from our respective reputations that
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there was simply no reason for confusion. We made several crude jokes and
|
||
had a jolly good time together, a true male-bonding experience, all very macho
|
||
and rude. After a while though, Blackbird had to go to some other engage-
|
||
ment, probably a class.
|
||
|
||
This left us two dangerous characters alone and bored, with nothing to do. I
|
||
looked at Pope_751, he looked at me. We looked at the newspaper.
|
||
|
||
"Scissors," I stated.
|
||
|
||
He nodded vigorously and thus began the search for scissors. We didn't want
|
||
to be too obnoxious turning the apartment upside down looking for scissors,
|
||
being guests and all that. But we really did want some scissors. Eventually
|
||
I ventured upon a pair in Finrod's room, and we were in business.
|
||
|
||
We sorted through the advertisements and cut out several pictures of young
|
||
women and girls, especially the ones wearing only underwear. I was told to
|
||
search for an ad for a douche, while Pope_751 cut up the figures into phallic
|
||
shapes. By the time I found one, he had made many cute figures, mixed and
|
||
matched. If we had glue we would have made quite a collage.
|
||
|
||
But we didn't have any glue. And it was getting boring. So we tried to get
|
||
access, instead. We fiddled with the computer, and managed to get it to call
|
||
the university, but weren't able to get either an external line or access to an
|
||
account. It was a bummer.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately around this time, Tank Girl had waken up and stumbled her way
|
||
out of Bishop_III's bedroom. She was able to supply a few more clues about
|
||
hacking into the system with Tourmaline's account, but we still weren't able to
|
||
get through. So then she did the logical thing, she logged into her own
|
||
account. Finally, access!
|
||
|
||
While she was occupied with checking her email and seeing who was on
|
||
DreamScape, I decided to occupy myself with fulfilling some promises and
|
||
threats I had made previously, via mud, a week before. This involved fondling
|
||
Tank Girl, groping her, and massaging her breasts. She didn't object, which
|
||
set off an ancient, dusty voice in the back of my head.
|
||
|
||
"Pursue your ambitions," the voice said.
|
||
|
||
I needed no further encouragement; I went for it. She was wearing a
|
||
button-down dress, so I started by undoing a couple buttons, so I could get
|
||
some fingers through, and did some exploring. She fidgeted a little, but I
|
||
kept at it anyway. She was mudding on DreamScape by this time, telling the
|
||
gang how she was being molested by Xibo, and then the term "xibolestation"
|
||
appeared.
|
||
|
||
I discovered she wasn't wearing anything underneath, as my rubbing fingers
|
||
discovered pubic hair, and ventured further. Things progressed quite freely,
|
||
and I found myself finger-fucking her. I think this finally got her attention,
|
||
as she gave Pope_751 the controls and let him take over the computer.
|
||
|
||
The glasses came off, and the kissing started. We made out on the couch,
|
||
giving it reason to exist. Pope_751 was doing the play by play, exaggerating
|
||
the details a little. I figured since everyone had heard I was molesting her, I
|
||
might as well do it completely. I sucked on her neck, we sucked face, we
|
||
squirmed and thrusted. It was a blast.
|
||
|
||
Eventually we cooled off and went back to mudding, to see just what Pope_751
|
||
had told everyone. Unfortunately no one had logged it, which was a pisser.
|
||
I was feeling most amused at this time, and was well beyond caring what
|
||
Bishop_III might have done, had he woken up and walked in on us, which was
|
||
pretty abnormal for me. But I didn't give a shit; I was on vacation, having a
|
||
good time. They were supposed to have an open relationship anyway, so I
|
||
chose not to worry about it. I did wonder, though, whether the people on the
|
||
mud believed what Pope_751 had told them. It was all true, but rather
|
||
unexpected.
|
||
|
||
Tourmaline and Finrod arrived at one o'clock for lunch, and I finally got to
|
||
meet these cool people. Tourmaline wasn't near as fat as I thought she was,
|
||
and Finrod wasn't as pale as I was expecting, either. We sat around chatting
|
||
for a while, and Tourmaline wasn't at all surprised to see Tank Girl and I
|
||
being all cuddly on the couch; my assumption at the time was that she was
|
||
used to strange events occurring when mudders come to visit, but on retro-
|
||
spect I suspect that perhaps she felt such behavior was normal for Tank Girl.
|
||
|
||
Finrod bypassed conversation in favor of lunch. Tourmaline showed Pope_751
|
||
how to use the computer to get access, and then grabbed some quick chow for
|
||
herself. I blinked my eyes and they were back out the door, promising to be
|
||
back later, in time for quarter night at McDonald's.
|
||
|
||
That left our afternoon with time to kill. Pope_751 passed out at this point,
|
||
but I was still good for several hours, as staying up for thirty hours at a
|
||
time was something I picked up in grad school. So this of course led to more
|
||
playful xibolestation, and I grew to really admire Tank Girl's curvy features.
|
||
I should have fun like that more often. (At least more often than every three
|
||
years, but I'll not get into that here.)
|
||
|
||
Bishop_III woke up to find her bare legs in my lap, but he didn't even blink,
|
||
he just sat down on the couch next to us and looked over to see what was
|
||
going on the computer, with the mud. Did he mind that Tank Girl and I were
|
||
so cozy? I don't think so; at least, he gave no external sign. Lucky me.
|
||
|
||
Around sunset I was running out of motivation to stay awake, and had been
|
||
up a while, so decided to take a nap until dinner time. It felt like I was lying
|
||
there for only a couple minutes, but was told that I had been there an hour
|
||
when the dinner call came.
|
||
|
||
Tank Girl and I walked to McDonald's, where we all bought many fine ham-
|
||
burgers at twenty-five cents each. I could only eat four, though. Bishop_III
|
||
joined us there, and we also met up with Tourmaline and Finrod there, who
|
||
gave us a ride back, in Tourmaline's poor car, which had been dented pretty
|
||
severely by an asshole a while back.
|
||
|
||
The gang spent the evening chatting and ignoring the TV. We saw Pickles on
|
||
the mud and invited her over, and about half an hour later, Snag and Pickles
|
||
had arrived. Snag didn't stay very long, but Pickles sure did. She was a
|
||
very cuddly, and yet at the same time somewhat reserved, person. Pope_751
|
||
latched on to her in full-force scam mode.
|
||
|
||
He was doing the nice guy routine though, so I didn't think he'd make it. I
|
||
thought he should have talked less and felt more. I didn't think to tell him
|
||
this, though, as he was obviously enjoying himself, and my hands were
|
||
finding Tank Girl again.
|
||
|
||
Things began to melt and twist, like they usually do when I achieve the
|
||
sleep-deprived state. At one point Finrod had Tourmaline and Pickles on his
|
||
bed, in no particular order. Shortly after that I found Pope_751 had managed
|
||
to find his way in there, too. Bishop_III and Tank Girl went to bed, so I laid
|
||
back on the couch and thought about things, letting my brain vegetate to
|
||
images on the TV screen.
|
||
|
||
I became half-conscious for a while. I remember Finrod and Tourmaline going
|
||
to bed, Pope_751 and Pickles returning to the living room. We discussed how
|
||
firm her right nipple was, but her left one wasn't, and as they were cuddled
|
||
at the side of the couch, I was able to reach over and confirm, yes, her right
|
||
nipple was quite firm. So I told him that he just need to rub her left nipple
|
||
like so, and I demonstrated, and she didn't move to knock my hand way,
|
||
which I thought was neat. But any thoughts of a menage-a-trois faded as I
|
||
drifted thru valleys of dreams and fantasies.
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Tuesday, March 24th
|
||
|
||
|
||
So, he continued to sweet-talk her, trying to figure out why she didn't want
|
||
to go all the way. For a while he played with her using his stuffed rabbit
|
||
(he always takes it on trips), shoving it in her crotch, saying "FUCK DA
|
||
BUNNY", which I thought was amusing. As the days went by later, though,
|
||
"FUCK DA BUNNY" grew to be a hilarious inside joke.
|
||
|
||
They did get to making out, so I guess all of the nice guy routine talk
|
||
worked for him after all. This impressed me a lot. It was also entertaining
|
||
because they thought I was asleep there on the couch, when I wasn't,
|
||
entirely.
|
||
|
||
Although I did fall asleep for a while, with a few random dream segments. I
|
||
was wandering through a mall, lost. Then I escaped the mall, and shot my
|
||
gun at people who were chasing me, but the gun wouldn't work right. Finally
|
||
I got away from them, and found myself at some well-trimmed lawn, with
|
||
water-sprinklers running, ka-chick, ka-chick, ka-chik. I realized I was in a
|
||
dream at that point, and used my dream power to fly. So I was floating
|
||
above the lawn, watching the water sprinklers, listening to them, ka-chik,
|
||
ka-chik, ka-chick, when I thought that they didn't sound quite right. This
|
||
bit of suspicion took me out of the dream state, but the sound continued.
|
||
|
||
I continued breathing slowly so as not to alert the two on the floor that I had
|
||
awoken. They didn't notice. Pickles was mostly undressed, and Pope_751 had
|
||
his finger going in and out of her in the most sexual manner, rhythmatically,
|
||
making the noise I had heard. Pickles just laid there, quietly. After a few
|
||
minutes, he moved to her breasts, and fondled those for a while. All I could
|
||
think of at the time was, gee, there's a cute naked girl on the floor.
|
||
|
||
Discussing this later with him, he told me that he had suspected that I was
|
||
awake, but wasn't sure, and if I had made goofy faces at him, he would have
|
||
cracked up laughing. Apparently the experience was kind of wacky for him,
|
||
as she wasn't really into it.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, they cooled off and redressed, and I slipped way under this time, not
|
||
awakening until way past dawn. Blackbird was there doing breakfast things,
|
||
Pope_751 and Pickles were snuggled up cutely on the floor. When they awoke,
|
||
Pickles left rather abruptly, and we didn't see her again.
|
||
|
||
The morning went by listlessly; I wanted to play with Tank Girl some more,
|
||
but she was in Bishop_III's room sleeping next to him, and I couldn't think of
|
||
a way to get her out of there without waking him up. Thus I concentrated
|
||
instead on convincing Pope_751 that we really shouldn't drive to Milwaukee
|
||
without getting the tire fixed, so he went out to fix it. I watched Finrod and
|
||
Tourmaline come in and leave, played some more Game Boy, and basically
|
||
vegged, thinking about Bishop_III, in utter confusion. When Pope_751 re-
|
||
turned, after doing a couple errands, we discussed the possibility of hitting a
|
||
Milwaukee nightclub that night, and possibly making a side-trip to
|
||
Urbana-Champaign to visit cthonics, another mudder-type person. We contact-
|
||
ed him on DreamScape and got directions, and which included a 7-11 where
|
||
one can get "many fine slurpees".
|
||
|
||
Pickles made a brief appearance on the mud, and she said was dead now, her
|
||
parents had found out that she was gone out all night. I couldn't understand
|
||
the problem, she is twenty years old, but apparently still firmly in the grip of
|
||
her parents. I hate parents like that, and I think people over eighteen
|
||
should move out and develop their own life. Apparently she really was in
|
||
trouble, though, as there hasn't been any sign of her since then.
|
||
|
||
Pope_751 and I then went cruising around town again, and stopped by a
|
||
Von's, where I bought postcards and CDs [see Appendix A], wondering why
|
||
even a little town like that had a good selection. With great effort I convinced
|
||
Pope_751 to stop at a pizza joint, and my stomach stopped growling as I
|
||
chomped away. My cohort didn't eat much, and spent the time writing a letter
|
||
to one of his girlfriends.
|
||
|
||
When we arrived back at the apartment, Tank Girl was awake and Bishop_III
|
||
wasn't, which was an opportunity I just couldn't pass up. Quickly I hopped
|
||
onto the couch and commenced cuddling her all over again, breaking her
|
||
attention away from the computer. Pope_751 did his part by convincing her
|
||
to let him take over at the keyboard. This allowed her get more intimate with
|
||
me, and so we did. Things were going along merrily when Pope_751 tells us
|
||
that the people on the mud wanted to get the show on the road, as we
|
||
discovered he was doing a play-by-play, and logging it this time.
|
||
|
||
"Okay," I said, "I guess I'd better get the condoms out, then."
|
||
|
||
"I guess so," replied Tank Girl.
|
||
|
||
Right. Wow. Meanwhile, Tourmaline was in the room too, fretting over
|
||
whether to do Logic or Differential Equations homework, and I had the
|
||
opportunity to have sex, even though it meant there would be two people
|
||
watching.
|
||
|
||
It was a simple decision, I didn't even hesitate.
|
||
|
||
It went like yesterday, but more intense; she responded well to my bites on
|
||
the neck, and quickly my pants were open, her dress was skirted up, and we
|
||
were in business. It was fast, yes, and I would have preferred a slow night
|
||
of nude snuggling in a warm bed, but such luxuries weren't available at the
|
||
time. It was really intense, though, and we enjoyed ourselves. And I even
|
||
remembered to use the condom!
|
||
|
||
So, we recovered after that, and I looked over the log, trying to figure out
|
||
whether the people on the mud believed what was happening, and basically
|
||
felt pretty happy overall. Pope_751 figured out the way to get out of town
|
||
and we prepared to depart. Bishop_III came around, and I got to sit there
|
||
cuddling Tank Girl, wondering if he knew what just went down, and what
|
||
would happen when he found out, and so on.
|
||
|
||
But enough of that. It was great, but Pope_751 was driving, and he said it
|
||
was time to leave, so we blew, and kicked on down the road towards Urbana-
|
||
-Champaign. While Pope_751 grumbled about the slow truck in front of him, I
|
||
got a chance to lie back and ponder what just happened. It's not every year
|
||
I get this lucky, or whatever, so it was worth some thought. It really had me
|
||
confused, too.
|
||
|
||
After a few interesting grain silos and miles of tedium, we were back on the
|
||
Interstate, and Pope_751 began to mellow out, listening to Rush Limbaugh on
|
||
his low-tech radio. A strange structure came into view, and I asked him what
|
||
it was.
|
||
|
||
"Oh, that? That's a farm."
|
||
|
||
"Ah."
|
||
|
||
It was a peaceful, quiet moment, perfect for reflection and consideration of the
|
||
puzzle I had before me. My problem was that I suddenly felt that it had all
|
||
happened to easily. I began to wonder if there was a secret explanation
|
||
behind it all, some ulterior motives that I hadn't noticed. Why had I succeed-
|
||
ed here, when I had failed so many times before, elsewhere? The scary
|
||
thought occurred to me that perhaps it was just a pity fuck, that she had
|
||
heard about all my angst-related problems, and wanted to give me a pleasur-
|
||
able experience, out of pity for me. But the more I thought about this, the
|
||
more it just didn't seem right; I felt she was not acting out of pity, out of
|
||
curiosity maybe, but not pity. So I marked that idea off, there had to be
|
||
some other reason.
|
||
|
||
"And that? Is that a farm?"
|
||
|
||
"Why, yes."
|
||
|
||
"Imagine that, two farms in a row."
|
||
|
||
So my mind wandered over to stranger ideas. Maybe someone else at Purdue
|
||
felt sorry for me, and chose to make a present of Tank Girl to me, paying her
|
||
a small fee. I wondered who I knew there that would do something like that
|
||
for me, and while I entertained a few ideas, I had to reject this train of
|
||
thought, as she really didn't seem to be the type who would act as a
|
||
hired-out prostitute-type person. My mind was jumping among random guess-
|
||
es.
|
||
|
||
"Dude, look!"
|
||
|
||
"What?"
|
||
|
||
"A farm!"
|
||
|
||
"Whoaaa..."
|
||
|
||
Perhaps, then, she didn't do it for pay, but as a favor. Just to make my life
|
||
a little bit brighter and more hopeful. People have done me favors before,
|
||
although nothing like this. Still, this didn't seem right either, as I could
|
||
swear that she wouldn't have done it with Bishop_III right in the next room
|
||
unless she had her own personal reasons, a more self-satisfying motive. So
|
||
another idea fizzled out because it just didn't make any sense.
|
||
|
||
"Hey, is that another farm ahead?"
|
||
|
||
"Why, yes... I think so."
|
||
|
||
I twisted Pope_751's bunny's ears and thought some more. Could it have been
|
||
a challenge? A dare, perhaps? Maybe someone told her she wouldn't dare do
|
||
it, and the challenge was set, and she felt obligated to follow through with it.
|
||
But who would make such a dare? Well, truly, there a lot of obnoxious people
|
||
who do that, just to see what kind of reaction could be evoked. This didn't
|
||
explain the hints of action I was seeing on the mud during the weeks previ-
|
||
ous to the trip, though; we had been joking about it for quite a while before
|
||
I had arrived. In the end, I chose to shoot down this idea also.
|
||
|
||
"So, what's that building, then?"
|
||
|
||
"I don't know, let's see what it looks like when we get closer."
|
||
|
||
"Hmm. It looks vaguely familiar."
|
||
|
||
"Ah, yes. It's a farm."
|
||
|
||
So maybe it was my charming good looks, my winning personality, my out-
|
||
standing charisma... hell, maybe it was the beard. Only in the past couple
|
||
months have I had a beard, which would explain why no one had noticed me
|
||
before, as I've been working nights for the past few months, not seeing
|
||
anyone in my daily life. But the illusions of vanity only lasted for a few
|
||
minutes. Sure, I was no longer the dweeby kid I used to be many years ago,
|
||
but I'm no dashing heartthrob either. It was fun to contemplate, though.
|
||
|
||
"And that thing over there? Is that a farm?"
|
||
|
||
"Yes, I believe it is."
|
||
|
||
"What a coincidence, we just passed one a few minutes ago."
|
||
|
||
He nodded in agreement.
|
||
|
||
Finally, it occurred to me that maybe she was simply a very horny individual,
|
||
and could not resist sex whenever it was offered. I just happened to be in
|
||
the right place at the right time. Whee, I should be so lucky more often.
|
||
But then I remember how she actually lived in a dorm, and chose to stay at
|
||
the apartment the whole time I was there. Suddenly I realized it was no
|
||
coincidence, it wasn't just luck, that there was something beyond all that.
|
||
|
||
Another goddamn farm came into view.
|
||
|
||
"Isn't that a--"
|
||
|
||
"YES! IT'S ANOTHER FUCKING FARM!"
|
||
|
||
"Thought so."
|
||
|
||
But we ran out of farms, and I ran out of time to ponder the reasons and
|
||
motivations. It wasn't until about a week later that I had figured it all out;
|
||
the results are left as an exercise for the reader.
|
||
|
||
Urbana-Champaign was everything I dreamed it to be, and less. Our directions
|
||
to cthonics's place were rather vague, as he had no car, and thus didn't quite
|
||
understand what the freeways were, much less how to get to his apartment
|
||
from them. But we prevailed anyhow.
|
||
|
||
Actually, Pope_751's car needed gas and the 7-11 we stopped at happened to
|
||
be the same 7-11 that was referenced in the directions. So I bought slurpees,
|
||
and we made our way up to the third floor of some ancient slum. This
|
||
strange Kibo-like person answered our rapping at his door and it could only
|
||
be cthonics, so I thrust the cherry slurpee upon him, forcing him to accept it.
|
||
|
||
Pope_751 collapsed on the couch, all those farms had really stressed him out.
|
||
So we participated in casual conversation, and cthonics showed me a picture
|
||
of Claire's breast, so I borrowed one of his pink crayons and drew a picture
|
||
of Claire's left nipple and showed it around. Claire sure is a cutie, as I got to
|
||
see a picture of her face, too. Hunger drove us into action and we decided to
|
||
walk to the strip of restaurants in this thriving urban area, but it was very
|
||
difficult deciding just where to eat. We just wanted to walk up and down the
|
||
sidewalks all night long, but something broke our stride eventually, and we
|
||
ate sandwiches at a pub-type of place.
|
||
|
||
After that, I felt much better, but Pope_751 felt pretty dead. We walked back
|
||
to cthonics's pad, there being nothing else to do in Urbana-Champaign. He
|
||
even made some references to Lemmings, though I didn't get to see the actual
|
||
game. I convinced Pope_751 to hit the road, so we could make it to the
|
||
nightclub in Milwaukee he had mentioned earlier. This got us back on the
|
||
road.
|
||
|
||
We managed to get forty miles north of there when we stopped to pick up a
|
||
map. I knew if we kept heading north we'd have to run into a freeway
|
||
sooner or later, but Pope_751 was feeling a bit lost. Once we had the map I
|
||
realized we had been parallelling the freeway by five miles this whole time.
|
||
Oops. I took over the driving, and Pope_751 whipped out a pillow and
|
||
promptly passed out asleep. So I took the boat out of dock and headed it
|
||
back on course.
|
||
|
||
It was after sunset, and the farms and faded away into the darkness, when I
|
||
heard on the radio that Jerry Brown had won Connecticut. This shocked me,
|
||
and pleased me, as I really don't want to see Clinton in office, I don't even
|
||
want him as the democratic candidate. He just reminds me of the guy who
|
||
won all the popularity contests in high school, Class President, Captain of the
|
||
Football Team, and so on. At least Brown has interesting, if wacky, ideas.
|
||
Our government does need major changes, though.
|
||
|
||
I drove through Chicago, getting another beautiful taste of that skyline, all lit
|
||
up at night. By the time we arrived in Milwaukee, Pope_751 had woken up
|
||
after a restful four-hour nap. I didn't have any puzzling thoughts on that
|
||
leg of the trip, because I was vegging to talk/news radio the whole time.
|
||
This mind candy was pretty restful for me, and I was ready and willing to
|
||
party. I didn't even mind that the weather was below freezing, threatening to
|
||
create ice.
|
||
|
||
We dropped our luggage off at his house, in the basement where the comput-
|
||
er, stereo, and keyboards were. It was quite an artistic little cave, with Sid
|
||
Vicious posters and other cut-outs. Even a few penguins were present. But
|
||
we didn't stay long, and Pope_751 snatched his parents' car and we cruised
|
||
into the Downtown area.
|
||
|
||
Pope_751 led me to Esoteria, the closest thing one could find to a
|
||
teenydoomerland on a Tuesday night. It was a small place, with minimal
|
||
lighting effects, but at least they did play Skinny Puppy twice. I drank a
|
||
couple long island iced teas there, which were mixed a lot stronger than I was
|
||
used to, though I didn't notice until later. Maybe I should avoid drinking
|
||
when I'm travelling.
|
||
|
||
There were a few babes there, but for the most part they were in couples,
|
||
which led us to watch and chat, and not really do anything else. It was a
|
||
great way to unwind after being in a car for four hours, though. I let the
|
||
alcohol kick in, so the visions would swim.
|
||
|
||
Afterwards we drove back to the house, which wasn't a short drive, and
|
||
Pope_751 alternated tapes of his punk band's music and his wacky remixes of
|
||
popular industrial bands. It was quite a trip, especially with all the
|
||
streetlights and funky Milwaukee landmarks zooming by. The city even had a
|
||
little skyline of its own, in miniature.
|
||
|
||
At the house we watched TV for a while, and I must have really been trip-
|
||
ping, because I remember watching Perry Mason in the living room, and then
|
||
appearing downstairs in the cave, watching Pope_751 hit the local BBS/chat-
|
||
lines or maybe it was the muds. Probably both. After that blackout I chose
|
||
to do the sleep thing, and slipped into unconsciousness with a small, but firm,
|
||
thud.
|
||
|
||
Many, many hours later, I woke up and showered, any effect of a hangover
|
||
long gone. There was a light snow on the ground, and it made me kind of
|
||
paranoid, so I played with the Game Boy for a while. Then after Pope_751
|
||
woke up, I got online and my boss caught me, so I chatted with him for a
|
||
while. After reassuring him that the systems are doing fine and that I'd been
|
||
checking them periodically, he let me go and I skimmed over email things.
|
||
Then Pope_751 logged into his chatline where he spat and cursed and said
|
||
generally hateful things, as per his character.
|
||
|
||
Once that was over with, we headed back out and went shopping for CDs near
|
||
the downtown or university area. I was impressed with the selection they had
|
||
there, and bought even more CDs [see Appendix A] to add to my collection. I
|
||
never have the opportunity to buy these things at home, because the selection
|
||
in Tucson is limited.
|
||
|
||
That managed to kill a couple hours, and we drove back to the house,
|
||
listening to more of Pope_751's crazy custom remixes. He played for me a
|
||
song he was working on, "Senator Jack Kennedy", which existed as a program
|
||
in his PC. His collection of keyboards and other music machines was all
|
||
linked up MIDI-style with his computer, which gave him the power to create
|
||
interesting things, even though his recording equipment was rather limited.
|
||
|
||
He got back on the chats and got in touch with one of the local girls, Penny,
|
||
and arranged for us to take her to go see the move movie "Basic Instinct".
|
||
It was a bit of a rush, picking her up and getting to the theater on time, but
|
||
we managed it. Neither of us hit on her, too, which was amazing, considering
|
||
how things on this trip had gone. The movie was entertaining, though the
|
||
style reminded me of "Cape Fear", which is to say that I thought it was over-
|
||
-acted and the camera footage over-dramatic, considering that the sex scenes
|
||
weren't all that sexy, the violent scenes weren't that impressive, and the
|
||
lesbian scenes were mere hints of what they could have been. I felt like I
|
||
was watching an edited-for-television version of a movie I hadn't seen.
|
||
|
||
Afterwards we plundered through the snow and ice to hang out with some of
|
||
their friends at this fundie's house (excuse me, Protestant). I was interrogated
|
||
about my political and religious beliefs, which left the religious wacko rather
|
||
confused, since she respected how I supported Bush and the republican party,
|
||
but frowned strongly on my devout atheism. I was informed that she'd pray
|
||
for my soul. Aw, gee. Meanwhile the real action was with Penny and one of
|
||
the other guys there, as they were for the most part pretending the other
|
||
wasn't there, while at the same time striving to look natural and relaxed. I
|
||
found this amusing.
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Thursday, March 26th
|
||
|
||
|
||
Around 1:30am we were told it was getting late and it was time to leave, which
|
||
was fine with me, as I was bored with the whole affair by then. We got back
|
||
in the car and drove away, and the conversation of course instantly picked
|
||
up with Penny talking about her boy problems. Well, she's still pretty young,
|
||
I thought, excusable for being slightly immature. Though it really nagged me
|
||
that her problem was the most classic one that angst-ridden people have to
|
||
deal with: she didn't want to be romantic with this guy, but she didn't want
|
||
to hurt his feelings, so she wanted get the point across to him of "Let's Just
|
||
Be Friends".
|
||
|
||
Well, I nearly puked right there, and within minutes I was telling her exactly
|
||
what I thought about that line of reasoning, where it will go, and how much
|
||
pain she'll cause by pursuing this course of action. I rather doubt, though,
|
||
that my opinions sunk into her shallow mind. Sigh. I guess she would learn
|
||
the hard way, eventually. Pope_751 seemed to think she was a very smart
|
||
person, so maybe there's hope. I remain doubtful.
|
||
|
||
After we dropped her off, it was back to the basic male-bonding experience:
|
||
playing with music, reviewing CDs, and chatting with people via cyberspace,
|
||
be it the local chatline or a mud like DreamScape. My own mud was having
|
||
problems, as usual. Every time I leave town, the thing crashes. When we
|
||
bored of all this, we went back to sleep for a while.
|
||
|
||
When I woke up, there was a lot of snow on the ground, and it looked very
|
||
intimidating. We got a very slow start to the day, and didn't do very much.
|
||
Eventually, in the evening, we drove out to the university, using the old boat,
|
||
since a bigger car seems to be safer on ice.
|
||
|
||
We parked somewhere next to the campus, but it had been a while since
|
||
Pope_751 had been there, as he was totally lost and refused to admit it. We
|
||
walked through several buildings, looking for richter's office, who we were to
|
||
meet for dinner. Eventually, after a long walk through blowing wind and
|
||
heavy snow, we found ourselves at the student union, and became unlost.
|
||
|
||
After that it only took a few minutes to find the lab that richter was watching
|
||
over. She still had an hour to go, so after doing the introduction thing with
|
||
Markian Gooley and Mark Lippert, a couple of people from talk.bizarre, I
|
||
emptied my mind by reading news, as the keyboards were too messed up to do
|
||
the typing required for mudding. Mark Lippert, for those who are keeping
|
||
score at home, was the total opposite of Roger David Carasso. Totally differ-
|
||
ent personalities there; I kept thinking of him as the "anti-carasso".
|
||
|
||
After the hour was over, richter kicked people out of the lab, and we ran
|
||
(again through snow and ice, it was just getting colder) back to the car and
|
||
drove over to her place, parking at Walgreen's, because there was no parking
|
||
at her apartment building. Fortunately it wasn't a long walk. The apartment,
|
||
however, was pretty small, and crowded, for she had acquired all of her
|
||
grandmother's antiques. There wasn't any room to walk around, you just had
|
||
to stand in the same spot the whole time.
|
||
|
||
After several minutes of whining about her broken refrigerator, richter made
|
||
us dinner, which was chinese food, dumplings and rice and stuff like that. It
|
||
was enjoyable, but I'm not a big fan of chinese food, so wasn't overly im-
|
||
pressed. I would have just gone out to eat, though I guess that's an
|
||
expensive luxury to some.
|
||
|
||
After dinner Pope_751 and Mark Lippert took off; Markian and I spent the
|
||
night there, unfolding the couch, rearranging the furniture, checking the
|
||
weather channel, and basically being boring.
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Friday, March 27th
|
||
|
||
|
||
In the morning richter had to go to work for a few hours, which left Markian
|
||
and I with some hours to kill. We walked around, confused, in the morning
|
||
sun, trying to find a diner to have breakfast at. Most of the snow was
|
||
quickly melting away, which was quite a welcome relief. I was fairly paranoid
|
||
about snow and ice, because two years previous to this trip, I'd had an auto
|
||
wreck on black ice in Wisconsin.
|
||
|
||
Eventually we did find a place, and I got to experience what corned beef hash
|
||
is. It's pretty rare out west, and was a new experience for me. But a good
|
||
breakfast makes for a good day, so I merrily chomped away. I think I ate
|
||
breakfast more than other meal while on this vacation, with lots of eggs. I
|
||
like eggs.
|
||
|
||
After that we wandered back to the car and decided to kill some time down-
|
||
town. Markian's driving was about as bad as a beginning Student Driver, and
|
||
it was miraculous that we didn't have a wreck. He ran through red lights,
|
||
did left turns from the wrong lane, and generally made other people have to
|
||
swerve and slam brakes. I made sure my seat belt was securely fastened and
|
||
took comfort in the fact that he was driving a large american boat, and thus
|
||
we would probably be safe in the event of a collision.
|
||
|
||
Finally, after cutting off a city bus, we found a parking space, and it only
|
||
took fifteen minutes to finish parallel parking. We spent a couple hours
|
||
walking around the downtown area, taking in the architecture and other
|
||
scenery. There wasn't much of a street society, though, and things were
|
||
actually rather quiet. We killed time in a bookstore, visited Usinger's so
|
||
Markian could pick up some sausage, and watched a car squeal its alarm
|
||
endlessly. There were several smokestacks, a structure I don't see very
|
||
often. I thought they had all been knocked down back in the seventies.
|
||
Actually, parts of downtown Milwaukee were basically stuck in that decade,
|
||
with very few signs of modern cars or technologies present. Even the grade
|
||
school looked ancient, several stories high with horizontally hinged windows.
|
||
We also visited a museum, which had many items of historical interest,
|
||
including pictures and models describing Milwaukee as it had appeared in the
|
||
past.
|
||
|
||
Eventually we had killed our time, and hit the road again. Luckily we were
|
||
near the freeway, where Markian was a little better at driving. We drove off,
|
||
in search of richter's workplace. It was easy to find, mostly because Markian
|
||
had a city map, and I was able to translate richter's hastily scribbled direc-
|
||
tions into something coherent. We arrived a bit early, though, so stopped at
|
||
Denny's and Markian had lunch. I just ate some cole slaw. The menu at
|
||
Denny's had special Lent selections, for the religious type of people to choose
|
||
from. I didn't think anyone paid mind to such silliness anymore, but Markian
|
||
and richter both did, I believe.
|
||
|
||
I don't get it. Christ is *not* coming back, he's very dead. There is no god,
|
||
it's just a story that the ancient governments invented to give the commonfolk
|
||
hope. Oh well. Luckily, usually it's mostly harmless.
|
||
|
||
We entered richter's workplace, and had the lady at the main desk give her a
|
||
call to let us know we had arrived. But even then we were told to wait. I
|
||
shrugged, having had to wait all day, for this and that, and sat down on a
|
||
convenient couch, and paged through a magazine. A while later richter
|
||
arrived and we got back on the road, after a moderate delay at the conve-
|
||
nience store.
|
||
|
||
The drive to Minneapolis wasn't very eventful, either. Our cruising speed was
|
||
67 mph, and I played a variety of CDs on richter's jambox. No one complained
|
||
about the music, although the Current 93 CD was a bit tedious. The Enya and
|
||
Skinny Puppy CDs were very nice, though. We passed through a part of the
|
||
state where they were smashing up the Interstate with machines built for the
|
||
sole purpose of hitting the road like a hammer, shattering it. Then other
|
||
crane and scoop-like vehicles tore up the road, which revealed that it had
|
||
steel cables running through it.
|
||
|
||
I didn't know that the Interstates had steel running through them. And it was
|
||
surprising to learn that they were completely removing and replacing the
|
||
road, regularly. Every year they tear up stretches of road and replace them.
|
||
Winter really kills those roads. Back in the desert southwest, we have the
|
||
same roads they put down forty years ago. Every five to ten years we add a
|
||
layer of blacktop to it, and that's about it. It just made me wonder even
|
||
more why so many people choose to live so far north.
|
||
|
||
After about four or five hours, we came to the New Richmond and River Falls
|
||
exits, and I came to the surprising realization that things were actually
|
||
beginning to look familiar, from my visit to Wisconsin two years ago. This
|
||
comforted me greatly. It didn't last, though, as we were soon in Minneapolis,
|
||
which meant city driving, and things got scary again. We weaved our way to
|
||
Brian's apartment, as per the instructions I had been given, and it was quite
|
||
a relief to get out of the car. Finally, I could rest and be with old friends
|
||
and begin AngstCon III.
|
||
|
||
But it was not meant to be. On Brian's door was a map to Frang's house,
|
||
informing us to go there instead. I sighed very deeply and cursed, but we
|
||
got back in the car. The instructions made sense for about the first half, but
|
||
after that, they were vague and confused. We got sidetracked and found
|
||
ourselves several miles off course, so we backtracked and tried a second
|
||
attempt. I decided to skip over the confusing part of the directions and tried
|
||
to match the later part of the directions to the city map. We found one road
|
||
we were supposed to be on, but we couldn't find Elm street. Then there were
|
||
these detour signs and road construction and we found ourselves in a dark
|
||
and twisted place. Markian was rather confused, and richter and I were a bit
|
||
edgy from his driving, but I forced myself to concentrate, and logically figure
|
||
things out. I decided that as long as we headed in a certain general direc-
|
||
tion, we had to hit streets that made sense. And so, after a few minutes
|
||
parked in a dark, desolate, and broken road, staring at a map, we ventured
|
||
forth and discovered a road that matched the city map. We followed this until
|
||
we hit a road near the end of Brian's directions, basically counting numbered
|
||
streets, and finally found Frang's house. To this day, I have no idea where
|
||
Elm street is supposed to be.
|
||
|
||
Fortunately when we arrived, there were people present, familiar faces and
|
||
new faces. I hadn't met Brian and Frang before, but it was quite obvious to
|
||
me who was who. Harlan was there too, as was Anton, and the legendary
|
||
Krill-Man (TM). I took an offered beer and drank heavily, trying to calm
|
||
down and relax.
|
||
|
||
I didn't kill Brian. I was informed, however, had we arrived earlier, that not
|
||
only would we have found a map to Frang's on Brian's door, but there was
|
||
also a map to Brian's on Frang's door. I think, had I found this, someone
|
||
surely would have had to die.
|
||
|
||
So I interrogated Frang until he surrendered the instructions to the nearest
|
||
convenience store, and then grabbed Anton and pulled him out of there.
|
||
Markian followed us. I got to see Anton's new car, a Geo, which surprisingly
|
||
had legroom. I had heard good and bad things about the Geo line, but had
|
||
never been in one before. Overall, it's a good little car, better than I had
|
||
expected.
|
||
|
||
We drove to the store, looking for the large neon MILK sign, which we found
|
||
easily. Finding a parking spot was a little more challenging. I didn't care; it
|
||
was good to be with Anton again. I walked the aisles of the convenience
|
||
store, looking post-it notes, or several small objects. What I found was a bag
|
||
of fifty old-style (no spring, just one piece of wood) clothespins. So I got
|
||
those, and a heavy marker to write notes on the wood. I was pleased. I was
|
||
ready to return to the house.
|
||
|
||
Anton and ricther fell in love with a large bubble-maker, while we all chatted
|
||
and smiled and generally behaved jovially social. Frang's housemate made an
|
||
appearance, and boy was she a hot babe. I think having someone like that as
|
||
a housemate would be quite a distraction, but I could sense that Frang was
|
||
entirely comfortable with it. Hi Ho Silver's flight was cancelled thanks to a
|
||
stupid fuck-up with United Airlines, and wouldn't be in until the next
|
||
morning.
|
||
|
||
There were two cats in the house, which richter promptly scared off, yelling
|
||
and running at them. Then she whined because they were afraid of her. I
|
||
just shook my head. When she wasn't watching, the rest of us managed to
|
||
make peace with the cats. As the night went on, Anton blew hundreds of
|
||
large bubbles, getting soap all over the floor. We talked at some length about
|
||
bubbles, particularly their interesting psychedelic patterns of color.
|
||
|
||
For a little while I got Frang alone upstairs, and grabbed some access. Then
|
||
he checked the status of a large model he was running an FFT on. I felt in-
|
||
stantly envious of his job, because he got to use some mathematical code.
|
||
Though, as he pointed out, the difference between us was that I actually
|
||
understood the mathematics behind the operation. This made me feel a little
|
||
better, and so I played with some of Frang's puzzles, of which he had many.
|
||
|
||
It got late, and Harlan, Anton, Brian and the many thousands of krill took off,
|
||
while the rest of us found sleeping arrangements in the house. Frang carted
|
||
up furniture to the spare bedroom on the second floor, and we turned into it
|
||
a sea of sleeping bags. We didn't stay up all night talking, though; just shut
|
||
the light and went to sleep.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Saturday, March 28th
|
||
|
||
|
||
Markian woke up very early, but I could tell nothing was happening, so I
|
||
chose to sleep the morning away. When I finally came around, the house was
|
||
all quiet, which gave me the opportunity to draw faces on the clothespins and
|
||
hide a few. Most of the people were gone, to pick up Hi Ho Silver at the
|
||
airport.
|
||
|
||
I had only hidden a couple clothespins when they arrived, and it was really
|
||
great to see Silver again. And then a short while later, Anton arrived with
|
||
Ariel, and we all greeted her with a very warm reception. We then all drove
|
||
over to Brian's apartment, and he was actually there this time.
|
||
|
||
Finally, everyone was present at AngstCon III! Our first scheduled event was
|
||
at a pizza place that was supposed to have spectacular pizza, but there was a
|
||
catch: Brian had chosen it. The only good thing I can say about it is that
|
||
the drive to the place took us down a road that had some very interesting
|
||
large houses. It was like a mile-long row of small mansions. Out west all the
|
||
really nice houses are hidden in the foothills and surrounded by acres of
|
||
land. But here, we had some really nice houses, arranged as if it were just
|
||
another part of suburbia, which I found very amusing.
|
||
|
||
The pizza place, however, was ridiculously crowded. We could have guessed
|
||
at this by the fact that all the parking in the area was taken up. I thought
|
||
we would have been better off going, well, almost anywhere that wasn't
|
||
crowded. Pizza is pizza, but being able to talk with your friends in a
|
||
comfortable setting is very important, especially when you only see them only
|
||
once every year or two. But we ate, two slices each, oh boy.
|
||
|
||
Then we drove to the zoo. I couldn't figure out what the appeal of a zoo was
|
||
supposed to be, but most of the other members were keen on the idea. I
|
||
thought it was dumb, but then, I didn't even enjoy zoos back when I was a
|
||
small child. What can I say? They're boring. Well as it turned out, this zoo
|
||
was just about ready to close when we arrived, and the weather was all very
|
||
gray and cold, beginning to snow. It occurred to me that this AngstCon was
|
||
not very well planned, and that Brian was actually a bozo, who, though he
|
||
meant well, was making a mess of things.
|
||
|
||
So, I regained some control, convinced him that we should go to the CD store
|
||
next, and got the instructions from him. Then I got in Anton's car with
|
||
richter, Silver, and Ariel in the back seat. Silver really enjoyed that! Anton
|
||
even became jealous of the whole situation after a while. But it was great,
|
||
having the five of us in the car together, and the rest of the universe could
|
||
go to hell. There was nothing like having old friends you haven't seen in a
|
||
year or two, comfortably close together, cruising down the road.
|
||
|
||
We made it back downtown again, and spent a while in the CD store there.
|
||
One of the girls on the staff was a teenydoomer type, which everyone noticed
|
||
and thought I should hit on her. I didn't think she was that special, though.
|
||
Ariel asked me for a suggestion on which CD she should buy, so I told her to
|
||
get one by Dead Can Dance. Silver was finding many amusing album covers,
|
||
and I managed to find even more CDs to buy. [See Appendix A]
|
||
|
||
Since we were downtown, I figured I might as well find out what the Glam
|
||
Slam was like, since my brother is a major Prince fanatic. It was a few
|
||
blocks away, in cold snowy air, and the place was closed. But I took pictures
|
||
of the outside of it anyhow, to send to my brother, so he could be insanely
|
||
jealous.
|
||
|
||
After that, we ventured onto Minneapolis's Skyway, a most interesting and
|
||
modern idea. The skyscrapers all had shops in their first two floors, and one
|
||
year, long ago, someone connected two of them with an insulated walkway.
|
||
This idea caught on rapidly, and now all of the skyscrapers in Minneapolis are
|
||
connected with these insulated walkways. So it makes a sort of an expanded
|
||
mall, although, as we discovered, some of the walkways have limited access.
|
||
One area was even closed off because they were filming a movie there.
|
||
|
||
Some of us were getting thirsty, and others wanted to find a restroom, so we
|
||
asked Frang to lead us to one of these. He nodded and led us on, through a
|
||
skyway and into an upscale retail store called "Dayton's". In here he led us
|
||
around clothes and hats and down an escalator, and then finally we arrived at
|
||
a fresh produce center. I found myself staring at pineapples, wondering
|
||
where the restroom was, where the drinks were, and just why the hell we had
|
||
been led to pineapples.
|
||
|
||
It was time to exert some control again. I asked Anton if he knew anywhere
|
||
in this convoluted setup that might have drinks and restrooms, and was
|
||
finally able to get him to admit that there was indeed a Burger King. (There
|
||
were a few other suggestions from other people, but I had noticed that many
|
||
stores were closing up, and I knew Burger King would remain open for a
|
||
while, so I basically ignored everyone else.) I commanded him to lead on, and
|
||
in a few minutes, we were at Burger King. Many of us let out a large sigh of
|
||
relief.
|
||
|
||
After that we decided to head back to the cars, and Brian was leading again.
|
||
This put us staring at dead end sections of skyway, closed off hallways, and
|
||
security guards who weren't sure of what advice to give. Anton and I'd had
|
||
enough, and took off running down a darkened hallway. Everyone else chose
|
||
to stay with the group. We ducked into an alcove where there were elevators,
|
||
and jumped in one. Anton quickly pressed the Close Door button, saying,
|
||
"We've got to get away from those people." I just nodded in agreement, with
|
||
an insane smile. We ran outdoors and across the street, into a more open
|
||
section of the skyway, and while Anton perused a map, I took a gander at an
|
||
awesome babe in leather. It Anton a while to figure out what I was panting
|
||
at, but when he did, he asked me if I was going to invite her to dinner.
|
||
|
||
I just smiled at him, and thought of the group we were with, and told him no.
|
||
Not the right time, not the right environment. It was tempting, though,
|
||
because she did look hot.
|
||
|
||
Then we were walking through skyways and we got sidetracked a couple
|
||
times, being just a little bit lost, but having lots of fun. Eventually, we made
|
||
it to the car, and relaxed. It took the others about half an hour to catch up
|
||
with us, for they had taken an even more circuitous route than we had. I
|
||
couldn't believe Brian had actually lived in this area for any period of time,
|
||
but he supposedly had.
|
||
|
||
So, thinking of the pineapples, we decided we wouldn't follow Brian to the
|
||
restaurant we were to go for dinner, and Anton got Brian to tell him and
|
||
scribble out a crude map of where it was. We recaptured Ariel, Silver, and
|
||
richter, put them in the back seat, and took off into the snow. We became
|
||
immediately lost. I couldn't even tell which direction we were going.
|
||
|
||
The best part about this was that we didn't even care. It was just too great
|
||
to be together in the car again, and we all had a merry time, talking away,
|
||
while Silver did the cuddly-tickly thing with the two girls in the back seat,
|
||
making Anton envious all over again. Eventually we found a major highway
|
||
and were able to manage to find our way to the restaurant, about an hour
|
||
late.
|
||
|
||
The restaurant was a manchurian chinese place, with a buffet, so you had to
|
||
walk downstairs to get your food, and carry it back up. I thought this was
|
||
pretty inconvenient, especially considering that I knew the price would be
|
||
rather high. As the two groups of five took turns going downstairs for food,
|
||
the others rearranged the seating arrangements. We did it first, so the five
|
||
of us could sit together, and then they did it second, to switch ends of the
|
||
table with us. The food wasn't bad, I rather enjoyed it, though some people
|
||
didn't, particularly richter, who spent most of the dinner downstairs on the
|
||
phone, making alternative travel arrangements back to Milwaukee, so she
|
||
wouldn't have to drive back with Markian.
|
||
|
||
After dinner we recollected back at Brian's place, and I hid several clothes-
|
||
pins in his apartment. We spent an hour there watching richter and Brian
|
||
put his stereo system together, which wasn't overly interesting. I made
|
||
myself useful by inspecting a line noise problem on his phone line, and de-
|
||
clared it to be the fault of a bad wire, after some testing. I managed to find
|
||
enough wire to hook up his modem and phone, though, so he was able to use
|
||
those, but not until later that night.
|
||
|
||
Eventually Ariel was about to panic with boredom, and we could hardly blame
|
||
her, and Anton ordered all of us out, to go find ice cream. Everyone stamped-
|
||
ed out of the place, but I managed to stop them on the porch and get a plan
|
||
set up. Of course, we didn't follow the plan, we ended up somewhere else
|
||
anyway, but it was an ice cream parlor.
|
||
|
||
We made our way to the back of the place, where we took over a room
|
||
reserved for children's parties. Again, the five of us at one table, and the
|
||
other five at another. Krill-Man, out of tradition, bought everyone ice cream,
|
||
and he asked me if he would always be the one that had to do it, and I
|
||
reassured him that I would take over the tradition once I made a higher
|
||
salary than him. This may be a while, because he currently makes more than
|
||
twice what I do.
|
||
|
||
The ice cream, of course, was delicious. I made everyone an official AngstCon
|
||
III clothespin, which people clipped onto lapels and such. Someone found
|
||
some crayons, and we all began scribbling on the placemats, making very
|
||
interesting pictures, ranging from Ariel's violent surrealism to Anton's
|
||
thought-provoking abstraction. I drew a severed hand.
|
||
|
||
Afterwards, we drove back to Brian's, but only richter and I entered the
|
||
apartment. I explained to Brian that we were going to take Jill home, and
|
||
that we would go directly to Frang's afterwards. Then richter explained to
|
||
Markian that she wouldn't be returning with him. I tried to keep it as quick
|
||
and to the point as possible; soon we were back on the road.
|
||
|
||
The drive to Jill's place was about thirty miles, so we all got to be happy and
|
||
chat all over again. It was sad to see her go. She had explained that she
|
||
was unable to join in Sunday's activities, so we hugged her goodbye and then
|
||
drove back to Frang's house, pleasantly and peacefully having a conversation
|
||
among friends.
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Sunday, March 29th
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
As we clambered up the stairs to the guest bedroom, we saw Frang's
|
||
housemate again, she had come out of her bedroom, drawn by the noise, I
|
||
guess. She was wearing nothing but a red robe, and I quickly took in her
|
||
sensual features, from her bare feet to her rounded calves to the inviting
|
||
cleavage and welcoming, sleepy smile. We talked for a while, I mean not just
|
||
me and her, but all of us, standing in the hallway. I rather wanted to follow
|
||
her into her bedroom and trip the light fantastic, but again, I was guest of
|
||
Frang's, and that might have been rather rude, so I skipped it.
|
||
|
||
Later, I was informed by Frang that she wanted to know if I was always that
|
||
shy. That rather shook me up. I now have to wonder if I have finally
|
||
managed to acquire some sex appeal, for it seems too incredible to be true.
|
||
|
||
Anyway, we all dived into the sea of sleeping bags once more and got some
|
||
rest. In the morning it took a while to cycle people through the shower, so
|
||
Silver and I chased richter around in our underwear, tickling her, and
|
||
generally being pests. Anton took advantage of this opportunity and clicked
|
||
off a shot with his camera, and I am sure richter wishes she could burn the
|
||
negatives. She yelled and cursed when the flash went off, it was most
|
||
amusing.
|
||
|
||
Then we all packed in Markian's car to go to breakfast, but the first restau-
|
||
rant we went to wasn't serving breakfast that late, so we had dessert instead,
|
||
my treat. After that we drove to a different restaurant and waited for a half
|
||
hour or more for seating, but were finally rewarded with a breakfast menu in
|
||
the afternoon. I ordered eggs, of course.
|
||
|
||
Frang called up Brian's apartment to figure out what that group was planning,
|
||
and we were told to visit the spoon. Actually, this turned out to be an art
|
||
museum with rather large outdoor exhibits, one of which included a spoon
|
||
about forty feet long, with a cherry on it. There were several other sculp-
|
||
tures there, too, which kept us browsing through the area for over an hour.
|
||
We didn't see Brian's group there, though.
|
||
|
||
When we drove back to Frang's house, and got out of the car, Brian's car
|
||
drove up. Krill-Man (TM) jumped out, yelled, "Bye! Bye! Bye!" and he
|
||
hopped around and hugged everyone, and then jumped back in the car, which
|
||
then zoomed off to the airport. I believe he was cutting it rather close.
|
||
|
||
Silver's flight and mine were ten minutes apart, and we had plenty of time to
|
||
get to the airport. We hung out at the house for a while, and I hid a few
|
||
more clothespins. It got dull, so we moseyed on down the road to airport,
|
||
and I got a ride in Frang's CRX finally. In the car he had some pictures of
|
||
my hero, Vice President Dan Quayle, from the time that he visited Cray, where
|
||
Frang works.
|
||
|
||
Silver and I checked our baggage and then we explored the bookstore and
|
||
gift shop in the middle of the airport. I picked up some reading material,
|
||
including a Waldo spoof called "Find Dan Quayle". I had to grab it and run
|
||
away to keep the others from pointing out where he was on every page, for
|
||
they had seen it before. After that we had lunch at Pizza Hut Express, yay,
|
||
personal pan pizzas. A fitting last meal for the end of a fun vacation.
|
||
|
||
The trip back home was uneventful, with a ninety-minute layover at the DFW
|
||
airport. I spent most of the flight reading Business Week and the Wall Street
|
||
Journal, as I wasn't in the mood to concentrate on the whole Tank Girl thing,
|
||
which occupied my thoughts for a long period afterward. It was almost
|
||
midnight when I touched down in Tucson, and within an hour I was back in
|
||
the office, catching up on work.
|
||
|
||
It was a great trip, and surely the most eventful vacation I've ever had. The
|
||
expenses came in a little under budget, since I had set some money aside for
|
||
bus fares, had that been necessary. I met many people for the first time that
|
||
I've known for years via the computer nets, and got to see some people who I
|
||
hadn't seen since previous AngstCons. I got to experience what city life is
|
||
like in some major cities, giving me more to compare and contrast with Los
|
||
Angeles and New York City. I became closer to some people, and done things
|
||
that I have never done before. It was a very educational, growing experi-
|
||
ence, and well worth it.
|
||
|
||
-- Xibo
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
<page break>
|
||
|
||
Appendix A, list of cd's bought, deleted because I felt like it
|
||
|
||
Appendix B, Airport protocol:
|
||
|
||
Before you commence your trip, be sure that the person who is picking you
|
||
up at the airport knows the airline, flight number, and arrival time of your
|
||
flight. It may help to confirm the date and airport, especially if the city
|
||
you're going to has more than one popular airport.
|
||
|
||
Travelling is a hectic, sometimes scary experience, and can be very frustrat-
|
||
ing. Thus, there is nothing more encouraging than seeing a familiar face at
|
||
the gate when you disembark the plane. If at all possible, the person picking
|
||
you up should arrange to be at the gate.
|
||
|
||
Note that if you arrive and there is no one there, you are expect to proceed
|
||
to the baggage claim area. This will always take you through the security
|
||
checkpoint, although in some airports there are many of these to choose from.
|
||
Meeting a person at a security checkpoint might work if they can't get past it
|
||
(for whatever reason), but this method should not be depended upon unless
|
||
there is only one possible security checkpoint that you could come out of, like
|
||
in smaller airports.
|
||
|
||
At the baggage claim area you will wait and get your luggage. If your ride is
|
||
not here either, you must assume they are late; it may be wise to give a
|
||
phone call at this point, to see if your ride has left the house yet. A really
|
||
caring person will leave a message on the answering machine saying, "Don't
|
||
panic! I'm on my way to the airport! Wait by the baggage claim area!" This
|
||
is a good place to wait, as it is unique to your flight, and it is indoors, shel-
|
||
tered from rain, snow, heat, or whatever miserable weather there might be.
|
||
Plus, outside, you'll not know where to meet the person.
|
||
|
||
Arranging to meet elsewhere should be done with the utmost care. Parking
|
||
lots are bad, because they are so big. Restaurants can be misleading, because
|
||
most airports have more than one place that looks like you can get food there.
|
||
|
||
With some simple advance planning, with consideration and patience on both
|
||
sides, and contingency plans, you should never have to worry about being
|
||
stuck in an airport of some strange city, alone with no friends in sight.
|
||
|
||
- END -
|
||
|