334 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
334 lines
16 KiB
Plaintext
Dear Recipient of ATI. I received quite a
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long submission and considered busting it
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up into three parts like we did with the
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unabomber article, the compressionism
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textbook and some of the others, but then
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I realized I'd have almost nowhere to put
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parts 2 and 3 since I'm on the road this
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week.
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So I've pushed most everything else back
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for a little bit so you can read it in here
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as one long textfile.
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Enjoy,
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Prime Anarchist
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Hi!!! & Welcome to ATI,
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activist trumpeters of ideas.
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_ || '
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< \, =||= \\
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/-|| || || 284 - 0107311355
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(( || || ||
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\/\\ \\, \\
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- Very Few NUMBERS To Run-
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http://www.indymedia.org/front.php3?article_id=55467
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http://free.freespeech.org/xaa/xaa0001.txt
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http://phrontistery.50megs.com/govern.html
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http://free.freespeech.org/delacruz
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http://www.sonic.net/~comix
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http://platdragon.cjb.net
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http://www.flakmag.com
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http://www.anada.net
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NEWZ -
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>>From LBC newsletter:
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>>---Mark your calendars- LBC is gonna
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>>be on national television. Who would
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>>have Thought? Friday, August 3rd on
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>>the Craig Kilborn Show on CBS watch
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>>us bust out
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"Bossman"
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ON THE ROAD 2001 - There and Back Again and Things in the Middle
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by aaron kreider
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Prologue
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Here in lies the account of my second ever hitchhiking trip.
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My first trip, in 1999, can be read online at
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http://www.nd.edu/~akreider/essays/ontheroadzineversion.txt.
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I live in South Bend, Indiana, but this trip started off in Kansas because
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I was in Owen Sound, Ontario for a family reunion and then got a ride to
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Kansas with relatives. My goal was to make it to Alpine, WY, a small town
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on the Wyoming / Idaho border, a couple hours south of Yellowstone.
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Actually, the final destination was on a forest road twenty miles east of
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Alpine where Earth First! was holding its annual rendez-vous (July 7 - 16)
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in the Tetons National Forest.
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Part I : There
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I took notes on the en-route trip, which were very helpful in remembering
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details.
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The real adventure started Sunday morning at 9am (July 8) when I got a ride
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with relatives from Newton (Kansas) to Salina (arrived at 10:15am), which
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is just on the I-70 interstate. The general plan was to hitch north on 81
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to I-80, west on the interstate to Evanston, and then north on 89 to
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Alpine. I got a Boeing hat from my uncle, which served me well given the
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hot weather that was to come. I had boldly written "NORTH TO I-80" on my
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sign. The gods were with me and within ten minutes I had a ride, albeit a
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short one to Concordia. I was picked up by a woman in her thirties with a
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young boy and girl who were on a long trip in a van without any AC. But so
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long as I was making distance, that was fine.
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All was going well and after thirty minutes of hitching in Concordia (or
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more likely its north side) I was picked up by another woman also in her
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thirties (with holes in her jeans) and without AC. Unfortunately she was
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not going far at all and left me off in Belleville around noon. The last
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and only other time I'd been in Kansas it was just this hot. Today the
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thermometer was at 95 and the heat index at 105. The fact that it was noon
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and there wasn't any shade where I hitched on the north side of town made
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matters worse. Construction work is ongoing to turn 81 into a two-lane
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road, but at Belleville it only had one lane going each way. I had a good
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spot, with a decent area for cars to pull over and they could see me for a
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good distance before they had to stop to pick me up, but after two hours I
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wasn't getting any bites. I drank most of my water (I only had 1.6 l) and
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then walked to the nearest gas station to refill and recover from the heat.
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Walking was excruciating since I wasn't accustomed to my pack and I was
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suffering from the heat. I got a bag of chips (figuring I was sweating out
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the salt) and a 32oz Slice with lots of ice. I read the local newspaper at
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the gas station, including an article about how 3/4 of the town was flooded
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in 1951. I returned to hitchhike from 3pm-4pm which is about the hottest
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time of the day. By this time I was sunburnt in spots since I hadn't lopped
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on the sun tan lotion as much as I should have. At 4pm, I called it quits
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as I was suffering from heat exhaustion and I headed to a travel
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information place-store that was the nearest place to crash. There I got
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some water and then crashed in the shade until 6pm. I was so exhausted that
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I tried lying on the grass, but it was too hot to lie down so I just sat on
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the bench and didn't do much. There were very few visitors to the store,
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mostly older people too, and as I was very tired I didn't try to get a ride.
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Finally, just resting there I got a ride offer from a talkative man in his
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fifties whose wife worked at the store. He took me across the KS-NE border
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to a truck stop even though he didn't have any reason to go that way. He
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just wanted to help me out. Unfortunately, the truck stop was inactive
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since highway 81 had been re-routed away from it and it only had two
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trucks! So I was back to hitching on 81. Within an hour, around 7:30pm, I
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got a ride to York (a.k.a. I-80) from a very talkative man who was hauling
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materials for 81's road construction which we discussed in detail.
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In York I visited the McDonald's bathroom, though I was so dehydrated that
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even after drinking 2-3 liters I didn't really need to go. The spot right
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at the on-ramp looked bad (no place to pull over), and I didn't want to
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risk hitchhiking on the interstate for if hitching is illegal in the area,
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it'd definitely be illegal on the interstate. So I hitched in front of a
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Flying J truck stop by a light where trucks would have to stop if it was
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red, with my sign saying "WEST" which is an important distinction since
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half of the traffic leaving the stop would be going east (and in this case
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more, since there were also roads going North and South).
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There were many trucks. Maybe 45 per hour going west. Finally after sunset,
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around 9:45pm I got a long ride from a Polish trucker in his late 30s /
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early 40s who had been driving straight from Chicago without sleeping. He'd
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immigrated in 1986. He was going to California. We stopped for a short time
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in North Platte (still in Nebraska) where he spent a long time
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professionally cleaning his windshield, only for the bugs to mess it up
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again later. We listened to the radio and Bavarian polka music. He smoked a
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cigarette about every 35 miles. I got some sleep over the course of a
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couple hours though it was difficult since the truck wasn't air-ride
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equipped and it vibrated terribly. I'd lay my head on the seat rest and it
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could bounce up to six inches in the air. Later he gave me a pillow that
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helped considerably. Also I'd get blasted with cold air whenever he opened
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the window to smoke. We ended up for the night at a truck stop just inside
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Wyoming, ten miles east of Cheyenne. We'd gained over 4000 feet of altitude
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and were now around 5500 feet "up there". This ride made the day, since I
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had beforehand I'd only been getting short rides. There he told me that
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he'd sleep for five to six hours and encouraged me to try to find a ride in
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the mean time.
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So I visited the bathroom and brushed my teeth (etc). As it was 4am, it
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wasn't a good time to get a ride so I sat in the mostly empty all-night
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restaurant, eating my two orders of hash browns and first cup of coffee
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that I'd drank this year. I took about an hour to do that and write some
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notes on my trip so far.
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I figured that some truckers get up around the crack of dawn, so I started
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hitching around 5am outside the truck stop. It turns out that few of them
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do, and that hitching around 7am or so would be a better time but as I
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didn't have anywhere to sleep, I had nothing better to do than stand
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outside in the cold and try and hitch. It had cooled during the night,
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perhaps down to 60 and it was windy to boot, so I put on my rain pants over
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my shorts to stay warm. This was a smallish truck stop, with perhaps thirty
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trucks staying there overnight. For the next fourteen and half hours I
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hitched either by the truck stop exit or on the interstate, only taking
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occasional breaks. My previous driver had promised to pick me up if I
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hadn't found a ride, but he either didn't see me hitching or didn't want to
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pick me up. I suspect the prior, since I think I saw him take the back exit
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and miss the place where I was standing. That was terribly disappointing. I
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started off outside the truck stop, but after a couple hours of no luck, I
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was less and less reluctant to hitch on the interstate. The interstate had
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lots of traffic. Two lanes and around 240 vehicles per hour. It was
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possible for many of them to stop, as there were considerable breaks in
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traffic, though traffic generally piles up and comes in bunches where it is
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hard for all but the last vehicle in the line to pull over. Another
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unfortunate factor was that the speed limit was 75, at which point they
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have less time to see a hitchhiker and pulling over is more difficult
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(especially for large trucks). For this time and much of the trip, it was
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hard to figure out whether to hitch on the interstate where there was more
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traffic or at a truck stop where it was much easier for vehicles to stop.
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I drank lots of water. It was probably only in the low 80s, but the sun
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seemed warmer with there being less atmosphere due to the altitude. I ate a
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pretzel, Pepsi, and tricolor popsicle from the store in the early afternoon
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to supplement my snacking on the food that I'd brought with me. I dumpster
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dived two 1-liter bottles to increase my water capacity to 3.6 liters.
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Unfortunately, I had these 8 pounds of water on the top of my backpack,
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which was not the best place for the weight.
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It wasn't all hopeless, though it often seemed so, as I had a ride offer
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going east (it's the thought that counts) and another just to Cheyenne
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which I refused since travelling ten miles wouldn't help that much. As
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evening came, I decided to walk along the interstate up a hill to see if I
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could see Cheyenne in the distance or scout out a place where I could crash
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and get some sleep that night since I was very tired. Needless to say at
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this point in time I was pretty discouraged, not to mention mad at the over
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a thousand drivers that could have given me a ride. On my last trip, I
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generally got a ride in two hours, and the worst case wait was about four
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or five. Cheyenne was actually far beyond the hill (not to mention my
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limited capability to walk with my pack), but fortunately while walking I
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got a ride at 7:30pm. I was very surprised to get it and showed it.
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And it was another woman driver! This trip I got a lot more rides from
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women than my last trip, when it was eight men and only one woman. She was
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my first strange driver of the trip. She'd been driving from Michigan, and
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was returning home. She was very talkative and tended to go off on
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tangents. Thirty-three years old, had a boy friend who was divorced and
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scared to marry her, had prior family and personal problems, couldn't have
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kids, hitch-hiked until age 22, liked country, and may have recently been
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"saved". She was driving a pickup truck with a friendly cute black dog
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("Bear") in the back. She worked three months per year in construction on
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power plants, earning over twenty thousand. We stopped in Laramie to get
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gas, and she also got some beer which had me a little worried as she
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proceeded to drink one or two of them while driving. After Cheyenne the
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countryside got very beautiful, though as it was night it was harder to
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see. For a couple hours we drove towards a very ominous looking
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thunderstorm, with lots of lightning, but only got a little rain. This was
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good since I eventually realized that my non-waterproof backpack with all
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my gear was in the back of the truck with Bear. Fortunately, it only got
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mildly wet.
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I slept an hour or two in the pickup and got let out at Little America, 68
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miles from the Utah border. Like Nebraska, Wyoming is a...
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[what, cliff hanger driving you crazy? OK. I'll get you a little more...]
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...very wide state. At the end of the ride, my driver offered me some money
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that I refused since I didn't need any. It was a good ride as we went 300
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miles and Little America was a huge truck stop. It had perhaps 100 trucks
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and also a lot of car traffic. At Little America, the first thing I saw
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was two hippies and their dog hanging out in front of store.
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I enthusiastically assumed/figured that they ought to be going to the EF!
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rendez-vous as well! Whenever I'm going to or coming from large protests I
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like to try and find people who are likewise involved, though I almost
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inevitably fail to do so. As it turned out, they weren't going to the
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rendez-vous, though they at least knew what EF! was and had just come
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back from the national Rainbow Gathering - which I think they said was
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in Montana. Anyways, I hit the luxurious bathroom to change clothes and
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put on pants for warmth. The bathroom was in excellent shape (ex. fancy
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faucets) and the stalls were like closets, since the walls went down to
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the floor and up to the ceiling. The unfortunate feature was...
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HOLY WAH!!! 44k???
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I'm not gonna do that to you this issue.
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I guess I WILL make it 2 or 3 parts for
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you afterall. I know where I'll put it:
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http://www.etext.org/Zines/ASCII/ATI/trilogy/thereandback.txt
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Read the rest there if you don't wish to wait for
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the next couple issues. And I'm sorry if I put the
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"...'s" in too much of cliff hangerish places.
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No I'm not. (but then you knew that, huh?)
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marco
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*Appendix*
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And here's a song spoof I rewrote two verses for
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that goes as follows:
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This land's not your land, this land's not my land
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>From Silicon Valley to Wall Street
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>From the corporate towers, to the factory farms
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This land's not made for you and me
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(need to add some verses here)
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I was walkin' - I saw a sign there
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And that sign said - no tress passin'
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But on the other side, I saw ten thousand people
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Shutting down the IMF and World Bank meeting in DC!
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This land is your land, this land is my land
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>From California, to the New York Island
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>From the redwood forest, to the gulf stream waters
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This land was made for you and me
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_w_a_r_n_i_n_g_
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`b`b`b`b`b`b`b`b_____j_u_s_t__
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GATT # ???
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(I've lost track. I'll figure
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it out by next month, promise)
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My ruminations on the whole thing can be found
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on my website (http://www.davidrovics.com), one
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of the first links you'll come to. Or you can
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go there directly at :
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http://members.aol.com/drovics/bonn.htm.
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You've also got to check out the fabulous
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Rinky Dink at http://www.rinky-dink.org.
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This traveling bicycle-powered sound system
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and radio station from England was in Bonn, and
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we were all glad they were there.
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The world needs more Rinky Dinks
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__c_a_u_s_e__
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d^d^d^d^d^d^d^d^d^
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_r_e_p_r_i_n_t
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SEGNAHC - SOIBMAC - CAMBIOS - CHANGES
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6.<2E>Activist Times Inc. (ATI): A diferencia de las otras
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publicaciones, ATI no se limita a publicar noticias sobre
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computadoras y/o tel<65>fonos. Sus n<>meros incluyen normalmente
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art<EFBFBD>culos con comentarios sobre eventos gubernamentales en
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el <20>mbito mundial y otros temas de "inter<65>s general" (con
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un gran predominio de notas develando teor<6F>as de conspiraciones
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implementadas desde las m<>s altas esferas del Estado y las
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corporaciones, tendientes a mantener ignorante a la poblaci<63>n).
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Los art<72>culos de ATI son generalmente cortos y suelen ser
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escritos por un n<>cleo de cuatro a siete personas. Al igual
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que 2600 magazine ATI s<>lo est<73> disponible en hard copy
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(impresa en papel) pudi<64>ndose adquirir mediante reembolso
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postal a nombre del editor que debe ser enviada a una casilla
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postal en los EE.UU.
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[ref]=
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[http://members.tripod.com/fmuraro/organizacion_social_de_los_hackers.htm]
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my best loose translation is:
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6 ati a difference from the other pubs, ati isn't limited
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to publishing stories on computers and telephony. Their
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topics include normal articles with commentary about
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government events and world stuff of general interest.
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(With a little too much about conspiracy theories of the
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state and the corporations, etc.) The articles of ATI are
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generally short and appear to be written by a core group
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of 4-6 people. Closest similarity to ATI is 2600 magazine
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but one may be just hard copy while another is just web.
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See? I told you it's my "best loose." Try babelfish
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and see if they can't get you even more lost.
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Thank you, and have a nice day.
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Shoutz and gr33tz to the lead singer of
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the band W4IK
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got feedback?
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ati@etext.org |