828 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
828 lines
23 KiB
Plaintext
From slcpi!govt.shearson.com!mjohnsto@uunet.UU.NET Tue Jan 8 09:49:56 1991
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To: wordy@Corp
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Subject: Part 46 of CAA #2
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THE HOBO CONCERTO
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#46 in the second online CAA series
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by
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Steven K. Roberts, HtN (WORDY)
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from Montana to Washington
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September 25, 1988
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copyright 1988, Steven K. Roberts
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Listening to a sampler album of "soulful oboe," I am taken in by
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texture... only to be cheated time and again by fade-outs, false resolutions,
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and a sort of musical sleight-of-hand designed to leap from intro to outro
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without wasting a moment in subtlety. This is classical music for those who
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cringe at the word CLASSICAL -- Wonder Bread wearing a Paulsbo mask.
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In the middle of all this, Maggie clears the candlelit salad dishes in a
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northwest country home. "Ready for dessert?"
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"My life is an endless quest for dessert," I tell her. "That's what
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destroyed my marriage." I smile ironically as the music changes again... damn,
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how many teasing snippets of greatness can they cram into one CD? As many
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lifetimes as I can fit into a journey? This is like a $9.95 VHS sampler of
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climactic moments from a blue movie publisher: a succession of come-ons. Is
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this also the essence of CAA? Is my lifestyle the "combo platter" of life's
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ethnic menu?
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Damn straight it is. And this last month has been an orgy of salivation,
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of music and apple bavarian torte, of sweat and technology, of brilliance and
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beauty. The road swirls around me like an expert lover -- no, like DOZENS of
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them. Every day enchants, teases, lures, and promises... only to yield like
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this damned patchwork CD to another theme, another flavor, another time.
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Rodrigo to London Derriere in an instant... then on to Rachmaninov and some
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syrupy bastardization of Simon & Garfunkel. From hippies to hams, from wild
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nights to wilderness, from inspiration to depravity without a moment's segue.
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I guess this is the essence of Computing Across America: it's a generalist's
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wet dream. That explains the cynicism from certain quarters... and the
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wanderlust sparkling in the eyes of the restless.
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This CAA adventure, whatever its current form, is tasting without
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commitment -- a life of mad diversity free from promises. And if I leap from
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prelude to curtain call with but a passing nod to the elegant recursion of
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thematic development; if my tales seem like an order of salmon mousse dijon
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with plum bourbon peppermint sauce and a couple of apple-beet jalapeno fritters
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on the side; if my life seems a gallery of computerized comic impressionism...
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then what the hell? This here, folks, is literary escapism at its maddest -- a
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cinema verite of the information age. I don't know what's next any more than
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YOU do.
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* * *
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And so it's an unusual night in rattlesnake country. Live C&W "Diggin' up
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bones..." wafts through a sea of RVs; kittens dart between the legs of cooking
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Maggie; Tim reads Neitzsche from his publication, "The Weekly Freak"
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(infrequently weekly but frequently weekly); Steve provides primal rhythmic
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undercurrents with his tapo drum; Emily smiles from a soft sea of dark hair.
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Camping with the hippie hitchikers is a stab from the past... memories of
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standing for hours on entrance ramps, of pack clutter, of uncertain nights, of
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brothers on the highway. The culture is STILL ALIVE.
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* * *
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Westbound in Montana. Maggie drives the bus; there's jazz on the stereo.
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The other eight of us sprawl on the bed... all asleep but me. Three kittens and
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a Biscuit, Wafer twitching in kitty-dreams. Steve and Tim, curled
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symmetrically, long blonde hairsplays flowing over familiar pillows. Pretty
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Emily, dozing in the sweet aftermath of my creamy massage, young flesh bouncing
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gently to the Montana highway and distracting my eye from the HP screen.
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<pang>
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Yes, the hippie culture is still alive. We picked them up in Bismarck,
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three freaks with a "Seattle Please" sign, overloaded backpacks, amulets,
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anklets, beads, and tie-dye. They're young -- late teens, early 20's -- not
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carryovers from my salad days at all but a new crop of youth without the perms,
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spikes, MBAs, crosses, pick-em- ups, or Reeboks that identify the major teen
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subcultures of our age. They're hand-to-mouth hippies, just like in the old
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days, getting by on underground publications, minor crafts, waitressing, odd
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jobs, and luck. I find it somehow refreshing.
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* * *
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We're camping in Columbus, Montana. The dipole is a thin gold gleam 40
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feet above the campfire, and the radio squawks sideband chatter from most of
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the US. My weak signal has picked up a few db by originating in Montana, while
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our crew of five has been joined by three girls from town. Our guests are
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mingling to mutual astonishment.
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"I saw this thing on TV about deadheads, you know? Are you guys, like,
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well, you know, deadheads?"
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"Yeah, we're deadheads..." Steve and Tim roll their eyes subtly.
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"Well, is it like a band, or what?"
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Suppressed giggles. "It's a band."
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"So what kind of music is it? Like, is it Christian, rock, heavy
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metal...?"
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They try to explain, dealing in metaphors that could only mystify. I jump
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in: "Think of the Grateful Dead as the DNA of the hippie culture -- the
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cultural side of all this is more important than the music. Every other
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phenomenon that was born then has since withered or evolved into something
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else... but the Dead is still there, a focus not only for survivors of the era
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but a magnet for those who have come along since." I gesture to our new
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friends.
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One girl, 17, blonde and wide-eyed, frighteningly provincial but still
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harboring a promising vein of curiosity, is in deep awe of all of us. She
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senses something stirring inside, an awareness that there may, in fact, be some
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CHOICE in matters of lifestyle (gee...). "Everything is so planned out," she
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said, "I know I'm going to college next year, and I know I'll be at Brian's
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Saturday night." What she meant but couldn't say, of course, is that her
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hairstyle, clothing, speech patterns, life expectations, beliefs, and
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intellectual potential are programmed as well.
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We sit around the fire in Itch-kep-pe Park, a lovely relief of tall trees
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along the Yellowstone River surrounded for miles by low hills, rocky scrub, and
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drought-ravaged croplands. The local girls see us as a wild and exotic
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phenomenon, a rare glimpse of the OUTSIDE -- hitchiking hippies enroute to the
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Dead concert in Eugene and high- tech nomads wandering about with talking
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bicycles and publishing gigs. After the flow of philosophy and spirited banter,
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after we bared her wanderlust as if we were a Marion power shovel and she a
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Marissan cornfield, she spoke...
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"This is the happiest day of my life."
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* * *
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The bus carries new scars, deep gouges on the hood from flying crescent
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wrenches. Evidence that I'm tiring of this machine lies in the casual shrug
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with which I accept such injuries -- yeah, yeah, so what... as long as it
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didn't break anything that will cost money to fix. The occasion this time was
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the antenna's "throw-wrench" stuck high in a tree.... and an inspired rescue
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scheme involving an irresistable force and an immovable object. I just started
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backing up, stretching the nylon antenna-support rope... until the wrench
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whistled past the heads of our friends and penetrated the steel of the bus.
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Hmm. Coulda been grim.
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* * *
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Now it's Anaconda, Montana: once a thriving mill town, now in the throes
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of the slow death that comes when the company takes its business elsewhere.
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The union (the same pushy union that single- handedly created the PVC pipe
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market by forcing up the price of copper) is the culprit... Anaconda decided
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mid-strike that it is cheaper to ship Butte copper ore to Japan and haul ingots
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back across the Pacific that it is to smelt it with union labor 35 miles away
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in Anaconda. The town, now, is hoist on its own petard.
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And so this inbred place born of copper smelting grapples with the reality
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of a failing economy. Protectionist policies among merchants intimidate new
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business... those few who try to bring about change are threatened or
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harrassed. Prices are a strange mix of high and low: expensive retail goods
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and a falling real estate market. People can't afford to leave, but they drive
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to Butte or Missoula to shop. The only possible salvation would be an influx
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of refugees from suburbia, come to create a ski area like the ones that
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transformed countless Rocky Mountain mining towns.
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In the meantime, there are attractions. The Fairmount resort has hot
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springs and a good water slide. There's history in the hills, along with
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arsenic and other goodies. And there's Ken, K0PP, a "big gun" ham radio
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operator with a head full of ideas and an antenna farm to die for.
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We're here for a week, the hitchikers long since off to the Dead concert
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in Eugene and points beyond. This time it's a culture shock of the radio world
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-- a meeting between a bicycle-mobile whisper in the wilderness and a
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high-powered shout from the mountaintops. I'm used to waiting patiently for
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other stations to call CQ, knowing that they'll be straining through the static
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for calls, hoping that a snippet of my speech can be detected before some
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kilowatt pegs the meter. But Ken here is one of the kilowatts, driving beams
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atop high towers, ionizing the big Montana sky... and he's in a location rare
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enough to make even the most jaded of ham ears twitch.
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"Try it," he said with a twinkle, tuning the linear up on 20 meters and
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shoving the microphone in front of me.
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I called CQ and had a relaxed chat with a fellow on the east coast... who
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gave me a signal report loosely comparable to being in the same room, shouting
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in his face. When I bid him 73 and reached for the dial, about four stations
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called me at once.
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Within moments, I was on the hot seat -- racking up contacts in a sort of
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frenzy, sweating, buzzing with excitement. Now I see why guys go off on
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DXpeditions! "Tango alpha, go ahead; X-ray India, you'll be next." What
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power... so many people wanted to talk to me that the response to each "QRZ?"
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was a meter-pegging roar of mingled voices. It got so I felt guilty when one of
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them turned out to be an intriguing fellow in Pennsylvania, living on a farm
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with extensive solar and wind power systems. By the time we had chatted for
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about 20 minutes, I gave in to the silent pressure from the invisible queue of
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stations needing a rare county in Montana. It's a strange culture, out there
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on the airwaves... and like the one here on land, it contains wild extremes
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that hardly even recognize each other as participants in the same dance.
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* * *
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Speaking of which, I've just had a telephone clash with my most vocal
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critic (take a guess). We're in Anacortes, Washington, engaged in spirited
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barter of intellect and energy with Bill and Evelyn Mathauser. Bill, about 70,
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is a sparkling and energetic wizard of mechanical engineering -- the creator of
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the hydraulic bicycle brake and a host of other projects over the decades. He
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neither acts nor looks his age... and I wouldn't be surprised if he could
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out-pedal me on a cross-country sprint.
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The details are unique, but the nature of the relationship is typical. We
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stay for a few days, exchanging the products of our skills in a complex
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whirlwind of wild ideas and problem-solving. Bill and I disappear for hours
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into the shop, emerging grimy and grinning to eat and discuss patents, quality,
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marketing trends, hydraulic couplings, op amps, strain gauges, politics, trade
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shows...
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And when it ends and we pack up, when the cords are coiled and the fridge
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bungeed shut, the familiar parting scene we have come to know so well will
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occur. Bill and I will shake hands, hug the ladies, thank each other, and
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promise to follow up on some of the more intriguing specifics. That's the
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basic barter of our nomadic life -- and the essence of our long-term security
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(deep relationships and mutual respect are more universally bankable than deep
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mortgages and mutual funds).
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But ah, the critic. In a birthday phone call tonight (mine -- 36) the
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attack started. "When are you going to stop leeching off of people? You can't
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go on taking advantage of hospitality forever, you know. So do you just hang
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around for three weeks then get kicked out on the street? If you're so social,
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why couldn't you find time to visit your own cousin in Boston last month? Do
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you ever plan to grow up, or are you going to live on handouts all your life?"
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Etcetera.
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It occured to me in the midst of it all that I can count on one hand the
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overnight visits that occurred in my childhood. Ours was a clean and stable
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home, but not a particularly social one; relatives were far away and drop-ins
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were discouraged. The rare invited guest was cause for days of panic about the
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imagined mess, then subjected to a barrage of hospitality that struck me, even
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in childhood, as foreign. When I had my brief obbligato flirtation with the
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curious custom of marriage a decade after moving out, it was the clashing of
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alien cultures: her family was big, busy, casual, and loud. They even played
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horseshoes and welcomed unannounced visitors, and they found my parents every
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bit as strange as my parents found them.
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I mention all this because Maggie and I are daily reminded of the
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diversity of social patterns in this country -- a giant place that may appear
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homogenized on the surface but is in fact a mad tangle of non- miscible
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behavior patterns. Families beget expectations about HOW THE WORLD OUT THERE
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WORKS, and it is as hard for children to escape this programming as it is for
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parents to grapple with the occasion of their doing so.
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In general, this is an amazingly social land. Here and there are
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paranoid, closed minds that refuse social intercourse beyond the safe haven of
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old friends, but most people welcome at least a glimpse of the outside world
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(as long as it's not TOO weird). Most important to our nomadic adventure is
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the fact that every community harbors a scattering of exceptional people who
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thrive on learning, welcome surprises, seek new friendships, enjoy barter,
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consider alternatives, and otherwise prefer to stay alive at some level beyond
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the fevered maintenance of a featureless status quo. I've tried to find some
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career correlation here, but I cannot: in recent experience, this meta-class
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has included an inventor, a surgeon, a power engineer, a wealthy nursing home
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magnate, a men's clothing salesman, a printer, a photo marketing expert, a
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writer, an antenna designer, a grade school teacher, an entrepreneurial
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millionnairre, a few computer people, a hand-to-mouth ex-hippie, and at least
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one totally loony kindred spirit who gets by on the random fruits of
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intelligent generalism. We've stayed, and shared deeply, with them all.
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And THIS is our real family -- for every visit is a reunion, every parting
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a poignant moment of energy-enriched sadness. Free exchange of skills and
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ideas is the very lifeblood of our culture, and it spawns a kinship that some
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people will never understand.
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* * *
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While we're in a mood for social commentary, by the way, I really must
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make one passing comment on this insane '88 election. Why is it that I have
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yet, in all my travels, to meet even ONE person who is unmistakably in favor of
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either candidate? Could this perhaps suggest some kind of flaw in the
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political process? I mean... how did these guys get in this position if nobody
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likes them? What would happen if we all stayed home on election day?
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* * *
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Yes, these are disturbing times, alright. There have been a lot of
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reminders recently about our continued misbehavior, as a species, where the
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environment is concerned. Things seemed hopeful about ten or fifteen years
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ago, when there was a popular outcry in the name of ecology.
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The key word here is "popular." We have a fickle press, a fickle national
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mindset. Things just don't stay interesting for very long: if you keep doing
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news stories about pollution, people will eventually get bored and change the
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channel. "Yeah, boy, remember that energy crisis a few years back? I'm glad
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THAT'S over." You hardly even hear any Ethiopian jokes any more, 'cause
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everyone knows that African starvation has either been taken care of or is just
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the way things are. And the environment, well, "greenhouse effect" is a
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popular word now, but it will go the way of mercury, dolphin, acid rain,
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dioxin, and all the rest. Just vaguely unpleasant words that recall a flood of
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special reports on the 6 o'clock news.
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Unfortunately, all that is catching up with us in the midst of our
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national obsession with personal bottom lines. The recent drought was a useful
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reminder, but it takes a real kick in the ass to get the public's attention.
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That one wasn't nearly hard enough -- we'll need something on the scale of an
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armed alien invasion to change the priorities of governments and make people
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realize that the earth is an island.
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The frustrating thing about all this from the standpoint of a reasonably
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involved writer is that editors filter the news to fit current tastes (as
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dictated by sales figures). "Too much gloom and doom," one recently told me,
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slashing some commentary on global perspective. Okay, boss. Next time I'll
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write about the Dust Bowl Diet.
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* * *
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Oh yes, publishing. (Hey, this is kinda fun -- I feel like Andy Rooney.)
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As you may know, my little nomadic business has gained a bit of stability
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lately in the form of the Computing Across America book. I finally have a
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product more substantial than the deadline-driven, personality-sensitive,
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stylistically limited game of freelancing. I have a BOOK. A widget. A
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product. And as long as I keep selling 'em, the publisher will keep printing
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'em.
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I won't bore you with the endless absurdity of the publishing business,
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for like most businesses it is filled with grim details, cronyism, shallow
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motives, and even a few honest and intelligent people. But if you're reading
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this, you're obviously a READER -- and probably not a typical one. One issue
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therefore affects you very personally.
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Have you noticed any recent changes in the fare offered by McDalton and
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McWalden? Can you tell what city you're in by walking into one of their
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stores? Do you ever look for something beyond past and present best sellers,
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self-help guides, coffee-table books on sale, and the usual staples in familiar
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departments... and find yourself frustrated?
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If your answers were yes, no, and hell yes, then you already know the
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problem. The major chains, those omnipotent dictators of popular taste capable
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of creating an overnight bestseller with a single stock order, have taken
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another step toward the homogenization of American intellect. By explicit
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corporate policy, B. Dalton now only buys from publishers who have more than
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five titles in their current trade catalog. In addition, they do all buying
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through New York -- that provincial megalopolis of the publishing industry.
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What this means to us readers in the American boonies is that no local books
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will appear in the major stores, nor will any titles of a specialized or
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esoteric nature. These they will only order with great reluctance, for the
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wholesale intermediaries impose such a margin that there's simply no money in
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it.
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My advice, if this is at all irritating to you, is to deluge your local
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literary fast-food outlets with insistent requests for special service -- then
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take your business noticeably elsewhere if they don't perform. As far as I can
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tell from this perspective, money is the only thing that still talks in today's
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world of arts and letters.
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* * *
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Somehow, though, all those frustrations seem less maddening here in the
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northwest. I had forgotten the beauty -- the green tunnels over rain-slicked
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roads, the dramatic confluence of mountain and sea, the sense of almost
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primordial timelessness. Bill Mathauser, between revelations of machining
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brilliance, told a story about his father in law.
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"The old man was from Arkansas, and he spent his whole life back there in
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the lumber industry -- at a big mill, I think. He came out here for a visit
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before he died a few years back, and one day asked me if I'd take him out to
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see the redwoods. "Sure, dad, sure," I told him.
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"Well, the next day we piled in the car and started driving. The old man
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fell asleep, and when we got to the redwood forest I found the biggest tree I
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could and parked right next to it. The thing was, oh, as big as from here to
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that wall over there -- a good sixteen feet or so. 'Dad? We're here. Wake
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up.'
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"'Mmf? Where?'
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"'These are the redwoods.' He looked out the window for a moment, then
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got out, staring at the tree. Then he started backing up, craning his neck to
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see the top. Finally he just stopped and stood there... and began crying. It
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was more magnificence than he could handle.
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"That night, around 2 AM, I heard him mumbling in the bathroom. I thought
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maybe he was sick, so I tiptoed over to the door and peeked in. There he was,
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sitting on the can, shaking his head and repeating over and over: 'They'll
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never believe me. They'll never believe me...'"
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* * *
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Obviously, the human encounters continue to be the heart of this
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adventure. At Larsen Antennas in Vancouver, I watched resident wizard David
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Phemister spring into action -- applying an intuitive understanding of RF black
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magic to the bike's special radiation problems. I now have a 3-section mast
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with coiled radials, and it rakes the sky with colored flags and exudes the
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low-powered whisperings to which I have returned since leaving Anaconda.
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Also in Vancouver, a cycling surgeon (IRHUMP on GEnie -- and the man
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behind the annual "To Hel'en Back" bicycle tour) deftly excised a Maggie-glitch
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and treated us to a few days of country living... complete with a pit bull
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named Gator. The cats found the beast horrifying enough to abandon their usual
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wanderings, and they huddled pitiably together in the bus, hissing and
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bristling through the windows at what turned out to be a remarkably gentle
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giant. And if you ever want a pointed perspective on insurance and such...
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take a surgeon to dinner and mention the word "malpractice." The entire
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careers of brilliant MDs now depend less on skill than on their ability to
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cover $100,000 annual premiums and their vulnerability to the impromptu
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contingency partnerships formed between patient and attorney.
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Now? What now? We're southbound this week, a round of meetings with
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Seattle-area equipment sponsors now history. Big conferences lie ahead...
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watch this space for an inside look next month at the mad, eccentric subculture
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of hackers. This gathering in Saratoga will be the antipode to COMDEX in the
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topologically tangled computer world -- a refreshing and perhaps frightening
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three-day tumble with the minds that spark technology's future. Ooh.
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Cheers from the islands...
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-- Steve
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