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1217 lines
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Plaintext
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CRASH Your guide to travel thru the underground Jan 1993
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"The first person we met in the bar was an old woman with oxygen tubes
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in her nose to breathe. She was sipping beer through a straw."
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...and other fun adventures from our 2-month road trip
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-----
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"A culture cannot be discriminatingly accepted, much less modified,
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except by persons who have seen through it -- by persons who have cut
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holes in the confining stockade of verbalized symbols and so are able
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to look at the world and, by reflection, at themselves in a new and
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relatively unprejudiced way."
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-- Aldous Huxley
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---------
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GREETINGS
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from the Crash Crew
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You realize by now we're not your ordinary travel zine. We get
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sidetracked. And to celebrate our 1-year anniversary, we've made The
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Crash Update bigger, more colorful, and even changed its name.
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The process of joining the network has been simplified in response to
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input from our members and also from experience gained on a 2-month
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road trip across the USA. The trip was made to see if a network like
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this could really work, and it was a major success. We stayed with
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people in 21 cities across 18 states, avoiding hotels completely. We
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crashed on beds, couches, futons, in tents, on floors, and enjoyed
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every minute. Nothing can describe the thrill of meeting each of our
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hosts for the first time. The article "Crash Course" is a day-to-day
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journal of this odyssey.
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This issue marks the separation of Crash magazine from The Crash
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Network. Now you can join the network and ignore Crash entirely (you
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won't hurt our feelings -- sniff, sniff).
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------
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DEBRIS
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Networking and information
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||
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* BIKECENTENNIAL, THE BICYCLE TRAVEL ASSOCIATION, publishes *Get Ready
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to Go Mountainbiking,* which lists resorts and ski areas catering to
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mountain bikes, mountain bike festivals, events, clubs, and
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organizations, guidebooks and manuals; and *Bicycle Vacations Guide,*
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||
which lists domestic and overseas tour operators. $2.50 each from
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Bikecentennial, P.O. Box 8308-P, Missoula, MT 59807 USA.
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* And on the subject of bicycling/adventure travel, there's the down-
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to-earth magazine KOKOPELLI NOTES. Issue 3 has an upbeat article on
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the invasion of Cuba...by bicycles from China, as well as thoughts on
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the joys of walking, written by Henry Thoreau. Send $3.00 for a sample
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issue to Kokopelli Notes, P.O. Box 1137, Asheville, NC 28816 USA.
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||
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* OUT YOUR BACKDOOR, a magazine of informal adventure, has off-beat
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travel info, notes on the Hospitality Experience, many helpful book
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||
and zine reviews, and a strangely familiar article on freight train
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hopping by Lee. Hmmm... $2.00 to Out Your Backdoor, P.O. Box 2163, Ann
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Arbor, MI 48106 USA.
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* GLOBAL EXCHANGE REALITY TOURS organizes tours in Cuba, Mexico,
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Africa, and the U.S., concentrating on learning the language, culture,
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||
and politics of local peoples. They also publish books, buy and sell
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||
crafts from third world artistans, host speaking tours, foster
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||
partnerships between first and third world groups, and conduct human
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||
rights and public policy campaigns. For more info, write to Global
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||
Exchange, 2017 Mission St., Suite 303, San Francisco, CA 94110 USA, or
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call (415) 255-7296.
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* GREAT EXPEDITIONS MAGAZINE is "committed to sustaining a network of
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travelers, to share their experiences, to encourage socially
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||
responsible travel, and to increase appreciation of the world, its
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||
cultures, and environments." The sample issue we received had articles
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on El Tisure, Venezuela, Peru's Taquila Island, Bali, the Himalayas in
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Nepal, and an excerpt from a remarkable book about 6 mens' bicycle
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trip across Siberia (over 7,000 miles). We're talking *out of the way*
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treks here. Truly adventurous types should write to Great Expeditions,
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P.O. Box 18036, Raleigh, NC 27619 USA, or call (919) 846-3600 or (800)
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743-3639.
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* Study Russian with a Russian family in Petropavlovsk on the
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Kamchatka Peninsula. At least two hours of private tutoring a day.
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Write RUSSIAN LANGUAGE, 626 Merrill St., Sitka, AK 99835 USA or call
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(907) 747-5553 from 0800-1800 PST.
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* AUSTRALIAN ALTERNATIVE COMMUNITIES DIRECTORY describes 41
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intentional communities in Australia that welcome visitors and are
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open to new members. Send $5 to Jo-Anne Ferriera, Australian
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||
Association of Sustainable Communities (AASC), 142 Agnew St., Norman
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Park, QLD 4170 AUSTRALIA.
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* TRANSITIONS ABROAD helps independent-minded travelers plan their own
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kind of overseas adventures: join an expedition, take a professional
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||
seminar, locate jobs and internships, exchange work for room and
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board, stay with a family, learn a language. Sample $4.50. Write to
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Transitions Abroad, 18 Hulst Rd., P.O. Box 344, Amherst, MA 01004 USA
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or call (413) 256-0373.
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* GAIA PASSAGE publishes a newsletter of "evolutionary travel
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information." Issue #4 included travel advisories for Albania and
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Mongolia, references to publications about communal and sustainable
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living, air courier travel, and various international travel
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resources. Back issues are $4. Write to Gaia Passage, Cullowhee, NC
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28723-2589 USA.
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* MEDIA ACTION KIT ("Do it yourself publicity"). Access to talk shows,
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mailing lists, press packets, etc. Send a 29c stamp to Media
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Distribution Co-Op, 1745 Louisiana St., Lawrence KA 66044.
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* WANTED: Old shock machines, quack medical devices, violet-rays,
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electro-treat. Collector wants to buy old 3" and 7" electrostatic TVs
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made before 1950. Pilot, Emerson, Dumont, Halicrafters, Motorola, RCA,
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also projection sets. Write to Steve Chekey, P.O. Box 39, Litchfield,
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OH 44253 USA or call (216) 723-2758.
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||
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------------
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CRASH COURSE
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by Miles Poindexter
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****************
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Saturday 10/3/92
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We wanted to leave at 8:00 am but due to the fact that we left
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everything to the last minute we got going around 12:00.
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We reached Los Angeles in about 7 hours, with only one stop to eat
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some food in a scenic gas station parking lot, next to the bathrooms
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and dumpsters, looking at an oil storage tank in the hazy distance.
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Steve and Suzy welcomed us into their huge loft in downtown L.A. that
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was in a converted warehouse. It was hard to consider this the
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beginning of our road trip, since I was still in California. The high
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point of the visit was going to Millie's Cafe and seeing my friends'
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band on the jukebox!
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**************
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Sunday 10/4/92
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Chloride, Arizona! Population approx. 300, looks like. We stayed with
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a progressively minded person named Stanfield Major. He edits
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*Touchpoint,* a networking zine for non-monogamous couples.
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We got some food at the one general store and later went to Wheelers,
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one of 2 bars in town. A round of Old Milwaukee for 3 of us cost only
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$2.25. Unfortunately, it was also the only beer on tap. We played some
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pool but broke the pool table from sinking the cue ball so much. The
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table just stopped returning it to us. I guess it got stuck somewhere
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inside.
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Needless to say, Chloride was a little weird. The first person we met
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in the bar was an old woman with oxygen tubes in her nose to breathe.
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She was sipping beer through a straw. After a friendly "hello," the
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manager of the general store talked to us about how 2 people had just
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been murdered at Grasshopper Junction, a campsite near Chloride. We
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set up our tents in Stan's yard, next to the cactuses and fell asleep
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early.
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**************
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Monday 10/5/92
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Woke up at 7:00 am to get an early start to the Grand Canyon, and met
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the talkative general store manager again. This time he told us there
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had been 6 police cars around Wheelers last night. The sheriff had
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even come into the bar to ask questions because some townsfolk had
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decided to run someone out of town. I'm glad we were only staying one
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night or they might have run us out next. I don't know how we slept
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through the whole thing since we were camped in Stanfield's yard right
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across the street from Wheelers.
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We did manage to glimpse the murals of Chloride which is what the town
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is known for. I thought they were going to be ancient native
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paintings, but they were painted 20 years ago by some guy on acid.
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We headed to the Grand Canyon. We hiked along the southern rim and ate
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some sandwiches of cheese and dry coleslaw that we made sitting at a
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beautiful vista about 4 feet from the edge. The canyon looks great
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during the day, but as dusk falls it starts turning grey and appears
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kind of sinister. It started to remind me of the domain of Morder from
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*The Hobbit.* I wouldn't want to be down there at night, kind of like
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being caught in a giant grave. The stars must look amazing from down
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there since the walls cut off all the earth light. Weird that one
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would see farther out into the edge of the Milky Way by descending
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into the earth.
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After watching the sunset from Hopi Point, we drove to Flagstaff and
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crashed at the house of the band Primitive Tribes. Sasha, Sandy, Shaun
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and Fred book their own tours, make their own tapes and bumper
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stickers, and do their own international distribution.
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***************
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Tuesday 10/6/92
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Drove all day to Albuquerque, passed a sign for "Route 666 -- South."
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Scary. Lots of American cars on the road in the midwest. Why? Just
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because they're "made in the USA?" More scary. We had lunch at a
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restaurant in the Old Town that was way too expensive, and nothing for
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vegetarians either. We were supposed to crash with someone named Anton
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Mechanism, but he hadn't left a phone number, so I tried calling for
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info, and the operator laughed at the name Mechanism after making me
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spell it. They didn't have it.
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So we drove right to his address and I knocked on the door of Anton, a
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complete stranger. There was a long silence and then he opened the
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door, buttoning his shirt. He was groggy since he had been napping but
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remembered my letter and invited us in. It was 8:30 at night and he
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was just about to go to a show with the band Miracle Legion. So Bojo
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and I bought some dark beer (Anton's favorite) and we got to talking.
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Anton's zine is called *Noise in the Void.* He's also busy studying
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anthropology and Celtic history. On his wall there were some beautiful
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gothic portraits of women he had done using colored pencils, crayon,
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lipstick and eye shadow. He has a rather large collection of pet
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chameleons (he corrected us when we called them lizards).
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Later, at the club, Bojo met a girl named Tammy, who had just been
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living in L.A. and sang in a band. I met a girl, Marilyn, who
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exchanged phone numbers with me. Later we went to a 24-hour cafe
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called Frontier and I saw someone that I thought had gone to India on
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a spiritual journey of some sort. But here he was in Albuquerque
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hanging out with his mom's boyfriend asking me if I had any pot. I
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didn't.
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Next day I called Marilyn and we went for coffee and food, then thrift
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shopping. We visited Old Town again and realized what a tourism
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wasteland it is. Later we went to see a strange movie called
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*Delicatessen* at a theatre on Central Ave. There're many good looking
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shops and cafes on this street, as well as the campus of University of
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New Mexico. After the movie we went to Joe's Bar to meet Bojo and
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Lesley and everyone. Anton said there was a club called Beyond
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Ordinary that had industrial dance music, so we went there. It was fun
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dancing to Jane's Addiction and Nine Inch Nails but there wasn't much
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heavy stuff, or even new. So we checked the live band at the other end
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of the club. They were playing on a stage literally 9 feet up! You
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could hurt your neck trying to watch them up close. We left Bojo and
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Tammy at the club and Lesley crashed at Anton's while I slept over
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Mariyln's.
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The next morning we got up too late to see the International Hot Air
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Balloon Festival and then Marilyn kept saying she hated goodbyes and
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wouldn't get out of bed when I got up to leave.
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****************
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Thursday 10/8/92
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When I got to Anton's, everyone was still asleep, but the strange
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thing was that Bojo was asleep on Anton's bed, and Anton was on the
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floor next to Lesley. When Lesley and Anton woke up they told me that
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Bojo had come home very late and very drunk from the club. He been
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lying on Anton's bed telling them how he had gotten lost and ended up
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in one of the most dangerous sections of the city and was trying to
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call a cab on a pay phone covered with blood when someone in a pick-up
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truck drove up and asked him "What the hell was he doing in this part
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of town?!" The guy was very helpful once he heard Bojo's story and
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drove him to Anton's. Bojo passed out on the bed after a few minutes
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and no one could wake him. Luckily, Anton wasn't mad about sleeping on
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the floor and even invited us to visit again on the way back.
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Next stop was the Peace Farm which is just north of Amarillo, Texas.
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We got there late afternoon and soon realized it was completely
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deserted. I guess that's why it was so peaceful. There were 2 trailers
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and 2 tiny houses on the lot. We found one trailer was unlocked so we
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just...kind of...explored. Someone had sent a letter to us telling us
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people could crash in the "guest trailer" at the Peace Farm so we
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figured this was the one. There were dirty dishes in the sink and
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rotting food in the fridge. It was as if somebody had left a few days
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ago, or maybe some one came and killed whoever was here and the body
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was buried in the yard. It was hard to keep our imaginations from
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dredging up scenarios from all the slasher films we had seen. As night
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approached and the cold wind started moaning outside, we decided to
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all sleep in the living room instead of separately in the bedrooms. I
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began to wonder if this trailer was some kind of lure for innocent
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hippies who would be hacked to death in their sleep and later eaten,
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kind of like a giant man-made Venus Fly Trap. There was a TV and VCR,
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bathroom facilities, and free food. It was too good to be real.
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2 hours later a car drove up to the other trailer and our hostess soon
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came over to say "Hi" and we were relieved to see that she didn't have
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a butcher knife with her. Mavis welcomed us graciously and remembered
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exactly who we were from our letter. She even stayed to watch "Star
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Trek -- The Next Generation" with us. (I still like the old one.) I
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have a habit of asking questions constantly during a TV show and
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talking too much so I almost got kicked out of the living room. The
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next day we dug a compost hole for Mavis and dumped all the rotting
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food from the fridge in it. That was our contribution for our lodging.
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The Peace Farm is a a great idea.
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**************
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Friday 10/9/92
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The first thing of note to see upon entering Oklahoma was a highway
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sign that said "Hitchhikers may be escaping inmates." What a pleasant
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state. But then again, we had been warned.
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So you want to visit Norman, OK? Well, make sure you buy your alcohol
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before 9:00 pm, because after that, you can't. Don't bother drinking
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the domestic beer, it's all 1/2 the normal alcohol content so it will
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make you piss a lot and not much else. Because of the weakness of
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Budweiser and it's counterparts, most Oklahomians seeking fun turned
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to the other bud, the green bud. But then the Oklahoma government
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cracked down on that because it became the state's #1 cash crop. So
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it's not as easy to get as it was a few years ago, but it's still
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pretty cheap.
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We were very lucky that Mark has a friendly room-mate, because when we
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arrived at his door, Mark wasn't home and had not told Kevin that we
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were coming! They had no phone so we couldn't have called ahead
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either. But they both work on Dachau, a zine about the Oklahoma music
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scene so Kevin invited us in when I mentioned this zine.
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He was eating army ration food which looked pretty gross, and started
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||
telling us about how he was sent to Kuwait during the Gulf War. It was
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||
upsetting to know that one can be taken out of college and sent
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||
overseas for a stupid oil skirmish even though one is only in the Army
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Reserves. Kevin had been going to boot camp only one weekend per month
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||
in order to pay for college and they had sent him to war. The Army
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||
also gave him some kind of experimental shot in case Iraq used
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biological weapons. He was still having side effects, which included
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intermittent bleeding gums and hair loss. I guess the Army really is
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||
an adventure.
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We got to hear a tape of our band on his $1500 stereo and it actually
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sounded good for once. Then Bojo and I bought some 40-ounce malt
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liquors and drank them with no noticeable effect at all. Luckily,
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Kevin met a friend of his at a cafe where we went for coffee and she
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||
invited us to a party where there was a giant bottle of tequila
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||
flowing. The cafe was on Asp Street, near Oklahoma University. This 2
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||
block strip of stores and caf<61>s is where a lot of students hang out.
|
||
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||
Most bands coming through Oklahoma play in Norman because it is a big
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||
college town. It's also one of the cheapest places to live. The house
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Kevin and Mark live in with 3 bedrooms was only $230/month. I can't
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||
even find one bedroom in a flat for that price in San Francisco.
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||
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*****************
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Saturday 10/10/92
|
||
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||
Dallas was hell. Well, I'm sure that's a far too generalized judgement
|
||
of a city so let's just say that on this particular day, for this
|
||
particular person, Dallas was hell. I'll sum up this experience up
|
||
with a brief list of the top ten things that went wrong in the big
|
||
"D."
|
||
|
||
1. Roxy, the person whom we we're to crash with, was out of town and
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||
didn't tell his son we might be coming. We did get to see his front
|
||
porch and it was fun and funky with all kinds of Native artwork and
|
||
artifacts. Roxy is of Choctaw descent and we would still love to meet
|
||
him someday because he wrote us a cool letter.
|
||
|
||
2. John Held, Jr., our back-up crashee, was also not home when I
|
||
called.
|
||
|
||
3. Oklahoma State and Univ. of Texas were playing a football game the
|
||
day we arrived. This college game is such a big rivalry that people
|
||
come from all around and just party in Dallas the whole weekend. Many
|
||
residents just leave town cause there're so many drunk, annoying frat
|
||
types from out-of-town that invade their local bars. (Maybe our
|
||
Crashees left town for this reason?)
|
||
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||
4. The Texas State Fair was also happening which meant more obnoxious
|
||
people, lots of traffic, and no parking anywhere.
|
||
|
||
5. Easy Street, the club where we wanted to go to see a show, and
|
||
maybe meet someone cool who would offer us their floor for the night,
|
||
had been closed down for good about 3 weeks ago.
|
||
|
||
6. I dropped my address book in a puddle of urine, in a parking lot
|
||
near a dumpster, where I guess a bunch of drunk assholes had been
|
||
pissing.
|
||
|
||
7. The phone took 85 cents from me and then botched my call to my aunt
|
||
and uncle in Houston. They were our next crash pad and we were
|
||
thinking of driving down there that night and just skipping Dallas.
|
||
|
||
8. I almost hit a cop on the highway leaving Dallas. I was about to
|
||
enter the left lane, so I looked in my mirror and started to go left,
|
||
when I had to swerve back just in time to get out of the way of a
|
||
speeding state trooper with no siren or flashing lights that whizzed
|
||
by at something near 100 mph. There were too many highway patrols out
|
||
this night because of the big events. We saw 4 people pulled off the
|
||
road in 5 minutes of driving.
|
||
|
||
9. The bar we went into had some horrible English motif, right down to
|
||
the bartender's limey accent, and beers were $3.50 each, way too
|
||
expensive for us, and one was warm.
|
||
|
||
10. We got lost trying to leave. The map we had didn't show any
|
||
streets that we needed.
|
||
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||
The one good store we found was Direct Hit Records, owned by Kelly
|
||
Keys.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Sunday 10/11/92
|
||
|
||
Arrived in Houston at 12:30 am so I guess it was the beginning of our
|
||
"Sunday" even though we went right to sleep. My uncle put us up in his
|
||
huge house. We each had our own bed and got a really good sleep. Uncle
|
||
Emmett was so gracious, even after having to wait up for us pretty
|
||
late. In the morning, after long, leisurely showers, I called my
|
||
cousin Trey who also lived in Houston and we went to visit him. The
|
||
city of Houston is very modern and very expensive. It just seems to
|
||
have no character and no respect for its own history. They didn't
|
||
preserve one historical building that I could see. Nothing but half-
|
||
empty sky scrapers built during the oil boom. Anyway, it was great to
|
||
see Trey now that he was divorced from that neo-Republican woman he
|
||
had met at Texas A&M. Trey was always too intelligent to fall into the
|
||
trap of ultra-conservative thought for very long, and it was nice to
|
||
see him back among the living. He showed us Madonna's video on his
|
||
giant screen TV with sense-surround stereo, then we headed for New
|
||
Orleans.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Monday 10/12/92
|
||
|
||
Most of the highway in Louisiana is on bridges over swampland. The
|
||
swamps are beautiful with trees and lush foliage growing in greenish
|
||
water. Our host had been living in New Orleans for 10 years and was an
|
||
amazing source of information about this beautiful old city. Michael
|
||
is a painter and his girlfriend is a sculptor. His house is a giant 2
|
||
bedroom flat that rents for only $200/month. We slept in the living
|
||
room on a spare futon he had and the next day explored the French
|
||
Quarter. The Voodoo Museum sucked. They wanted $5.00 just to let us in
|
||
(it's very small) and everything in the shop was overpriced. The
|
||
streets in the Quarter look like someplace in Europe. It's very old
|
||
architecture and a lot of intricately detailed iron work adorns the
|
||
buildings, with vines and other plant life growing throughout.
|
||
|
||
We didn't have much money so we visited a couple of thrift stores.
|
||
Many of the cheapest ones are on Magazine Street. We also drove by the
|
||
mansion of Anne Rice, which was two huge houses combined into one.
|
||
There were many burned out, empty buildings throughout New Orleans.
|
||
Many people had left during the economic recession/depression of the
|
||
last 3 years in which this city had been hit very hard. The Cajun
|
||
accent sounds a lot like the Brooklyn accent in New York City. We hit
|
||
many clubs and some good, inexpensive food places. Too many to go into
|
||
detail about so I'll just list as many as I can.
|
||
|
||
R. C. BRIDGE LOUNGE -- 120 Magazine St. (live entertainment)
|
||
|
||
COUNTRY FLAME -- 620 Iberville/near Royal (Mexican/Cuban)
|
||
|
||
GUMBO SHOP -- 630 St. Peter/near Bourbon St. (Cajun)
|
||
|
||
COOP'S -- 1109 Decatur/near St. Philip (Cajun)
|
||
|
||
RUE DE LA COURSE -- Magazine St./near Race St. (cafe, there are many
|
||
shops on Magazine)
|
||
|
||
CAFE BRAZIL and CAFE ISTANBUL -- Frenchman/near Chartres
|
||
|
||
CHECKPOINT CHARLIES -- Esplanade/near Decatur (24-hr. bar with bands)
|
||
|
||
KAGANS -- Decatur/near St. Philip ($3 pitchers of beer and rock&roll
|
||
crowd)
|
||
|
||
TIPITINAS -- Napoleon St./near Tchoupitoulas (bands)
|
||
|
||
TINAS -- St. Claude St./near Spain St. (great food. 2 pancakes and 2
|
||
eggs for $1.55)
|
||
|
||
BENNY'S -- Camp St./near Valence (bar with bands -- no cover)
|
||
|
||
THE HUMMINGBIRD -- 804 St. Charles/near Julia (24-hr. restaurant,
|
||
cheap food)
|
||
|
||
******************
|
||
Wednesday 10/14/92
|
||
|
||
Some license plates in this state look like this: LoUiSiAna. Get it?
|
||
|
||
I finally found a present for my mother's birthday, so now I could
|
||
relax. I really hate buying presents for people because there's no way
|
||
to know if they'll like it. It drives me crazy because I want to get
|
||
something unique, but then again my mother has no where near my taste
|
||
in weirdness. I got her a hammock.
|
||
|
||
We tried some Cajun cooking at Coop's. It wasn't nearly as spicy as I
|
||
expected, but there was always "Louisiana Hot Sauce" on the table to
|
||
fix that.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Thursday 10/15/92
|
||
|
||
We found 64oz. bottles of malt liquor and you might say "big whoop, 24
|
||
ounces more than a 40oz," right? But they were so big and under $3.00
|
||
each that we were fascinated by the prospect of drinking a whole one
|
||
so Bojo and I bought 2. We even saved one of the bottles to bring home
|
||
with us. Of course we got plastered and then went to eat at a ritzy
|
||
looking restaurant called The Gumbo Shop. I was trying to eat my gumbo
|
||
(which is a soup with lots of rice and parts of crab with the shell
|
||
intact), but my head was just spinning faster and faster. What happens
|
||
on the road is that I don't eat much since money is very tight and
|
||
there's not always enough time to eat 3 meals a day and still see the
|
||
sights. So I drank a lot of malt liquor on an empty stomach. I went to
|
||
the bathroom and puked, then sat on the toilet seat and tried to get
|
||
my head to stop spinning. Bojo finally came to get me after 15 minutes
|
||
and they guided me out of the restaurant to the street. I was
|
||
staggering drunk and don't remember much. They told me that they had
|
||
to get my wallet from my pocket and extract the money I owed for my
|
||
dinner. So remember, unless you want this to happen to you, drink
|
||
about half as much as you normally would on the road.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Friday 10/16/92
|
||
|
||
We stayed with Dale Ashemun, who's a member of The World for Free, a
|
||
great underground network run by Mykel Board out of New York City.
|
||
Dale has one of the biggest collection of comic art and erotica
|
||
fiction that I've ever seen, and writes for *Psychotronic* magazine. I
|
||
don't know what he thinks of us since we spent a lot of time in his
|
||
apartment reading his sex books instead of seeing the city. Dale
|
||
talked of his friendships with Lydia Lunch (Bojo's favorite) and Annie
|
||
Sprinkle. One night we all sat on his bed and watched a video Tracy
|
||
Lords made when she was 16.
|
||
|
||
It was great to feel the humidity of New Orleans after the dryness of
|
||
California, a state which I see as a developing desert. New Orleans
|
||
has a lush, sultry vibe to it, and a tinge of danger also. Too hot for
|
||
me to ever live here, though; I'm glad we visited in October since it
|
||
was milder weather.
|
||
|
||
We left today for Memphis, Tennessee, which took about 6-1/2 hours. We
|
||
ate at Babylon, a vegetarian/natural restaurant that was too
|
||
expensive. Later we went to Shangri-La, the record store of Eric and
|
||
Sherman on Madison St., our crash pad for the next 2 nights.
|
||
|
||
Shangri-La is truly a little paradise. I bought a new tape of Gang of
|
||
Four's greatest hits with 20 songs on it for $5.00. Stop in this store
|
||
when you get into Memphis to find out what shows are happening in
|
||
town. Friday night we went to see 3 bands at a club called Barristers.
|
||
The first band was OK. The second band was technically good but they
|
||
were musicians without a song, just hollow wanking. The third band,
|
||
The Grifters, was intense. This was their first show in many months.
|
||
They had nearly broken up because the bass player and guitarist liked
|
||
the same girl, and she was married to the drummer! So much of the
|
||
emotion they were feeling came across very powerfully live.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Saturday 10/17/92
|
||
|
||
Bojo and Lesley went to Graceland and I spent 2 hours in Sherman's an
|
||
isolation tank. This is a tank of water that's so pumped with heavy
|
||
salts that your body will float on top of it. It's also windowless so
|
||
its completely black inside. After a while it feels like just floating
|
||
in a void; almost total sensory deprivation. One either falls asleep,
|
||
or goes on a journey inside their head.
|
||
|
||
My mind was cluttered with so much trivial bullshit from living in the
|
||
city with all its distractions that I could not hang onto a single
|
||
thought. My brain just kept wandering. When I was young I could get so
|
||
absorbed in something like a drawing that I could work on it for a
|
||
week straight. I had focus. And now I think I've lost it, and without
|
||
focus, creative ideas will remain just that: ideas. I'd been slowly
|
||
realizing this over the past months and one of the reasons I went on
|
||
this trip was to explore smaller, quieter environs where I could get
|
||
involved in my music without interruption. The city is a great place
|
||
if you want to get swept away, almost like an amusement park of life.
|
||
But right now I need to get away for a while.
|
||
|
||
That night we went to the Antenna Club and saw five bands for $5.00.
|
||
There were many punk rockers there, since the club allowed anyone 18
|
||
and up to enter. And I guess its not enforced too well because a lot
|
||
of punks looked younger than 18. Very cool scene, but Eric told me
|
||
these shows are very rare. Beers in the club were only $1.00 per can.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Sunday 10/18/92
|
||
|
||
Went to see Al Green, the soul singer turned preacher, sing at his
|
||
church. There was a great gospel choir singing when we arrived,
|
||
accompanied by a piano, drums, bass, guitar and organ. Then Al Green
|
||
came out and started in with a very upbeat message about how everyone
|
||
is blessed to be alive no matter how bad things get. Then he would
|
||
keep breaking into a gospel song right in the middle of a sentence.
|
||
The band would always catch on right away and start rockin' with him.
|
||
Then Al would build it up and start shout-singing and running around
|
||
the pulpit. Gradually the music would speed up and one by one, women
|
||
in the audience would jump up and start writhing and gyrating in these
|
||
spiritual orgasms. One woman was screaming at the top of her lungs and
|
||
crying in ecstasy, like at a Beatles show. There were attendants
|
||
(ushers) running around and surrounding people who were freaking out
|
||
to keep them from hurting themselves or others, but never interfering
|
||
with their convulsions. Sometimes a person would break free and run
|
||
around the church, dancing and spinning wildly, and the ushers would
|
||
have to chase them. Meanwhile Al Green was still screaming uplifting
|
||
chants while his band was jamming full volume at a frantic pace.
|
||
Finally he would stop and everyone would get to sit down and rest for
|
||
a while. Actually, this 3-1/2 hour spectacle of spiritual fervor blew
|
||
away the punk rock show the night before. We got into our car
|
||
afterwards feeling strangely invigorated for our 14 hour drive to
|
||
Raleigh, North Carolina.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Monday 10/19/92
|
||
|
||
Drove all Sunday across Tennessee, and over the Appalachian mountains
|
||
in North Carolina. We got into Raleigh at 5:00 in the morning. It was
|
||
too early to contact our crashee so we looked for a coffee shop. We
|
||
passed one that had only men dressed in overalls with pick-up trucks
|
||
parked outside and drove on. I stopped at a phone to look for 24 hour
|
||
joints in the yellow pages and found an International House of
|
||
Pancakes. So we went there to eat and Bojo and I drank 3 cups of
|
||
coffee each. Finally, at 7:45 am with the waitress about to kick us
|
||
out, I called Alice to get directions to her house. We got there at
|
||
8:00 and Lesley crashed on the couch while Bojo and I decided to just
|
||
stay awake until Monday night (the coffee helped).
|
||
|
||
Alice and Bill are in a band called Wild Child so we talked and played
|
||
tapes of each others band. We were only half awake so everything was
|
||
kind of foggy, like a natural mind altering effect. We walked around
|
||
town to get fresh, cold October air in our lungs, and had more coffee
|
||
at the only coffee shop in Raleigh, Cup-A-Joes on Hillsborough St. The
|
||
prices were OK, considering the lack of competition, with 75 cent
|
||
house coffee and 65 cent day old baked goods.
|
||
|
||
NC State Univ. accounts for the myriad of students walking around
|
||
here. And there's actually a few other colleges in this rather large
|
||
city. One of them is The Peace College.
|
||
|
||
We watched the final presidential debates that night. I thought Ross
|
||
Perot was the winner, just because he said "It'll be fun!" I want a
|
||
t-shirt saying "Ross Perot for President...It'll be fun!" It's a
|
||
brilliant slogan. Afterwards we went to Nurs, a Greek food place with
|
||
pita bread filled with falafel and hummus and vegetables for $1.75. I
|
||
laid my sleeping bag out after I got back and fell asleep in about 3
|
||
minutes.
|
||
|
||
****************
|
||
Tuesday 10/20/92
|
||
|
||
Lesley announced that she hated sleeping in stranger's living rooms
|
||
and wanted out. She was going to She was going to fly back to San
|
||
Francisco when we got to New York City. A trip like this isn't for
|
||
everyone. I personally have been loving it so far, but Lesley wasn't.
|
||
The most important thing for me during this trip was the interaction
|
||
between the people we stayed with. Lesley was more interested in
|
||
seeing the "sights," and considered crashing a necessary evil in order
|
||
to save money.
|
||
|
||
She accused me of running the whole trip like a dictator, and dragging
|
||
her and Bojo along wherever I went. But I argued that I was just
|
||
following our host around and doing what they wanted as their guest,
|
||
and also because I'd rather hang out and get to know them than walk
|
||
around touristy spots in a city. As usual the truth lies somewhere in
|
||
between.
|
||
|
||
Maybe something will work out. I'm not going to make any plans or
|
||
decisions about my future until this trip is over.
|
||
|
||
******************
|
||
Wednesday 10/21/92
|
||
|
||
Last night we slept at the beautiful house of Sonar Strange. I had
|
||
called her Tuesday afternoon to tell her we were in Raleigh, and she
|
||
said she had already seen us. Turns out we had walked into the store
|
||
she was working at and she was sure right away we were from out of
|
||
town but was too shy to ask us our names.
|
||
|
||
Today we were invited by Alice and Bill to go with them to an open
|
||
mike night and play a song or two. We went to their rehearsal space
|
||
and borrowed some instruments to practice with since we didn't bring
|
||
any with us. Around 10:00 pm we went to Easy Street with Bill and
|
||
Alice to sign up to perform. Every band that performed before and
|
||
after us was a lame clich<63>d blues-progression, sloppy, guitar soloing
|
||
mess. It was like a musicians' graveyard. We did our 2 songs and the
|
||
audience actually clapped! I was surprised but happy. They thought we
|
||
were weird though. Afterwards, while I was watching Alice and Bill's
|
||
band, a guy came up to me and said he really loved my drumming and
|
||
asked me if I played a lot of jazz. I said, "No." Then he said he was
|
||
really looking for a drummer. So I told him I lived in San Francisco
|
||
and the commute to rehearsal would be rough. Then he says he had a
|
||
really weird band and needed a drummer to keep up with their
|
||
experimental style. Realizing that nothing I was saying was sinking
|
||
into his dimly lit mind, I asked what "weird" musical influences he
|
||
had? "Oh, uh, like Led Zeppelin mixed with Pink Floyd, with a little
|
||
bit of fusion thrown it." he said. At this point I just kind of went
|
||
"Oh" and mumbled something about looking for him if I moved to
|
||
Raleigh, then turned around and tried to ignore him. After Wild Child
|
||
finished, we left for Sonar's and fell asleep watching *Sisters,* an
|
||
old Brian DePalma movie.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Thursday 10/22/92
|
||
|
||
Went to Cup-A-Joes again and read papers about the coming elections.
|
||
Then ate at a Chinese restaurant with luncheon specials for only
|
||
$3.00. Sonar's band was playing that night at The Brewery so we went
|
||
early to the club to get in free and brought beer for the band.
|
||
|
||
After sound check things got slow so we all went to someone's house to
|
||
smoke. Little did I suspect that in little-ol-Raleigh I was about to
|
||
see my very first real-live crack pipe. I was fascinated by the scene.
|
||
After someone did a hit on the crack, the other person would say
|
||
"shotgun me" which meant, put your mouth up to mine and blow the smoke
|
||
into my lungs. I declined a hit on the crack pipe but went for a bong
|
||
hit. 2 guys started flirting with me when they found out I was from
|
||
San Francisco, so I started talking about womens' bodies in loving
|
||
terms until they recoiled in horror. One of them said, "I love women
|
||
to death, honey, but I just don't like their body parts," and we all
|
||
broke out laughing.
|
||
|
||
Back at the club Sonar asked me to videotape her band but I was
|
||
buzzing from beer and bud so I kept tilting the camera back and forth
|
||
trying to get the proper "Batman" angle like the TV show used whenever
|
||
they showed the bad guys. I hope they liked it.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Friday 10/23/92
|
||
|
||
Drove to Chapel Hill and walked around lost until a girl came up to us
|
||
and asked us if we were lost. It turns out we were on the main avenue
|
||
but in the wrong section. We talked with her for a while and she gave
|
||
us her phone number and told us she was going dancing with friends
|
||
that night. Her name was Lesley also. Then we visited a store called
|
||
The Internationalist on 408 W. Rosemary St. with lots of zines and
|
||
books.
|
||
|
||
I called our crashee, the editor of *Ransom St. Magazine,* but found
|
||
out he was in the hospital for leukemia treatments. I was sad when I
|
||
found out and I hope he's feeling better.
|
||
|
||
Not wanting to go back to Raleigh, we decided to meet Lesley at the
|
||
Dance club and see if she or one of her friends would let us crash.
|
||
The club was in Durham so we headed there and found 9th St. which had
|
||
some nice shops. One record store was called Poindexter Records so I
|
||
showed the manager my driver's license and talked him into giving me a
|
||
free shirt, just because it was my last name.
|
||
|
||
Our Lesley wanted to go back to Raleigh. I said No Way, I'm not
|
||
passing up a chance to meet some cool new people just because there's
|
||
some risk of not finding a place to crash. Deep down I knew someone
|
||
would let us crash, but God forbid we face an unknown future for a few
|
||
hours! Corny, huh? But I made my point. We met the other Lesley and 2
|
||
of her friends, Martin and Rich. As it turned out, Martin was a member
|
||
of the Crash Network also! The rest of the night was spent dancing at
|
||
The Power Station, the only dance club in Durham, or so the attitude
|
||
of the door guy would have us believe. We danced until after 2:00 am
|
||
and then Rich let us crash at his house since Martin had to get up
|
||
early.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Saturday 10/24/92
|
||
|
||
Went to breakfast and then a goodbye kiss with Lesley (from Chapel
|
||
Hill) ended up being followed by a couple more kisses while we sat on
|
||
the hood of Rodney (my car). I guess we liked each other more than we
|
||
thought. I gave her my phone number of where we were staying in New
|
||
Jersey since she was going to be in NYC visiting friends around the
|
||
same time.
|
||
|
||
We drove to Rockville, Maryland, which is right outside of Washington,
|
||
DC. Since we didn't have the phone number of Amelia G., we drove right
|
||
to her house, which she affectionately called "Cambodia." She and her
|
||
husband Forrest answered the door after our knock. They were a bit
|
||
wary of our video camera (which was filming), but after the initial
|
||
shock, she remembered who we were and invited us in.
|
||
|
||
Amelia G. is the editor of *Black Leather Times* and *Blue Blood* and
|
||
she and Forrest are great people. We went to a party with them and got
|
||
to meet a lot of the DC black leather crowd. I also got to check out a
|
||
lot of sex and horror literature laying around Amelia's office. Fun!
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Sunday 10/25/92
|
||
|
||
Went to the Smithsonian Museum of Natural History and the Air and
|
||
Space Museum. But before that we saw the Lincoln Monument which
|
||
elevates Abraham to Roman GOD status. This thing was big! Near it is
|
||
the Vietnam Veteran's Memorial. It is in the shape of a "V." In the
|
||
60's the "V" sign made with one's fingers meant "peace." Is there a
|
||
correlation here? Anyway, I don't need to tell you there's plenty to
|
||
see in DC, I mean, the whole city is a shrine to something. So I'll
|
||
just say we saw as much as we could and then headed to New Jersey that
|
||
night.
|
||
|
||
****************************************
|
||
Monday 10/26/92 through Tuesday 11/10/92
|
||
|
||
Well, we stayed in New Jersey in my home town until Tuesday, November
|
||
10th, when we went to Boston, Massachusetts for 3 days. I'll keep my
|
||
account of our stay here brief since a lot of it was family stuff that
|
||
would only be interesting to me.
|
||
|
||
Lesley left for NYC and took a flight back to San Francisco.
|
||
|
||
My grandfather was away on a cruise so we "house-sat" in his home
|
||
until our trip to Boston. His house is over 100 years old and inside
|
||
was like an antique furniture museum. We soon figured out how to use
|
||
the VCR and stereo and electric stair-chair which went up and down the
|
||
stairs at about 10 feet per minute.
|
||
|
||
We took a two day trip to see my sister, her husband, their new house,
|
||
2 cars, 2 dogs and my 2-1/2 month old niece in Betham, Connecticut.
|
||
|
||
We went into NYC just about every day since all we had to do was drive
|
||
to Hoboken, NJ, park for free and take the PATH subway train under the
|
||
Hudson River into downtown Manhattan for $1.00.
|
||
|
||
We saw the Guggenheim and Metropolitan museums, Central Park, the top
|
||
of the World Trade Center and Soho. It cost $4.00 to take an elevator
|
||
to the 107th floor observation deck at WTC, but one could stay as long
|
||
as one wanted. We stayed until the sunset. The Guggenheim is a strange
|
||
looking museum designed by Frank Lloyd Wright and inside was a great
|
||
show featuring Russian art during the time of the Bolshevik
|
||
Revolution.
|
||
|
||
At night we ate at St. Marks Pizza and walked around the village. Most
|
||
of the bars were expensive except for The Ale House on Barrow St.
|
||
(near West 4th Street and 7th Ave.) where mugs of beer were $1.00 on
|
||
Monday night, Sophies on 5th St. near Ave. A where dark and light beer
|
||
is $1.00 per mug every night, and Phoebes on 3rd Ave. near CBGB's
|
||
where one can get a pitcher of Bass Ale all night for $5.50.
|
||
|
||
Lesley, the girl we met in North Carolina, came up and met us in NYC a
|
||
few times with her friends she was staying with. She and I held each
|
||
other and kissed a lot in museums and walking around "The Village."
|
||
|
||
We met up with Mykel Board who lives in a great location in Manhattan
|
||
near Broadway. We talked about his network (The World for Free) and
|
||
mine. Hopefully, we can combine our resources in the near future.
|
||
|
||
The parade on Halloween night had the air of a Mardi Gras festival. It
|
||
was so crowded I was crushed. Lesley invited us to a party in Brooklyn
|
||
but we had very little money. We stayed in Manhattan to see a $3.00
|
||
show at the Continental, but the bands were lame. Many artists live in
|
||
Brooklyn because it's cheaper so I urge you to check it out when you
|
||
visit New York City.
|
||
|
||
Bojo and I bartended for my mother's birthday party. There were over
|
||
100 people in my parents' house so we were quite busy making drinks.
|
||
The most popular was orange juice, cranberry juice, and Vodka on the
|
||
rocks. I didn't remember a lot of people who seemed to know me.
|
||
Towards the end of the party Bojo and I inhaled the helium from some
|
||
balloons and sang "Happy Birthday" to my mother like a couple of
|
||
chipmunks. A couple of guests seemed fascinated.
|
||
|
||
It was CMJ (College Music Journal) week in NYC. When this event comes
|
||
to town, every club suddenly charges 3 times what they do normally to
|
||
see bands, and the bands are usually premier underground acts from all
|
||
over the world. So we were drinking at Phoebe's one night cause we
|
||
couldn't afford to get into CBGB's and we met 2 people from
|
||
Massachusetts who were in NYC for CMJ. Christine and Todd went to
|
||
college at Stonehill (near Boston) and she was General Manager at the
|
||
radio station there. They invited us to visit them next week so...we
|
||
did!
|
||
|
||
****************
|
||
Tuesday 11/10/92
|
||
|
||
Arrived at Stonehill College and found out Christine lives in an all-
|
||
girl wing of her dorm. So we set up sleeping bags in the lounge,
|
||
surrounded by 5 bedrooms with 2 girls in each. Luckily, none of them
|
||
were bothered by our presence. In fact, by the third day, some of them
|
||
were walking by us to the bathroom, dressed in only a towel.
|
||
|
||
We bought some Arctic Bay beer which was $7.00 for 12 bottles. At
|
||
night we drove into Boston (about 25 minutes away) and tried to go
|
||
dancing at Axis on Landsdowne St. But when we got there I guess the
|
||
doormen took offense to our appearance because we waited outside for
|
||
40 minutes while they let in all their friends and any cute girls.
|
||
Christine had to meet 2 friends inside so we waited until they let her
|
||
in, and then Bojo and I headed next door to Bill's, a very cool bar
|
||
where we got in for free, and met some people who weren't "too cool"
|
||
to talk with us. We also found out we had just missed a band while we
|
||
were waiting outside at the other club. Unfortunately, Bill's closes
|
||
at 2:15 am so our night was cut short.
|
||
|
||
******************
|
||
Wednesday 11/11/92
|
||
|
||
The next day Christine told us one of her DJs was sick and asked if
|
||
we'd like to do a 3 hour radio show! So we picked out all the
|
||
gothic/dance/industrial we could find and did the "Hippi-Witch Hour."
|
||
Every time we talked between songs I played the *The Exorcist*
|
||
soundtrack in the background. Later, Christine bought us food at the
|
||
cafeteria and we headed to Boston again. Newbury Street has the most
|
||
shops and is a beautiful street with restored brownstones. Most of
|
||
this city is a collage of old-meets-new architecture and it is
|
||
strangely clean.
|
||
|
||
The store to see on Newbury was Greenman Gargoyles, Grotesques, and
|
||
Chimeras where there are miniature and full size replicas of gothic
|
||
gargoyles from cathedrals. The store is dark and decorated sparsely
|
||
with dead leaves. Over the speakers one might hear a monk choir or
|
||
haunting piano music played by one of the store's owners. The
|
||
miniature gargoyles start at $6.00 so I got one called a "house
|
||
protector." There are also postcards and framed photos of stone
|
||
gargoyles on Notre-Dame cathedral in Paris.
|
||
|
||
The freedom trail is a red stripe painted on the sidewalk that starts
|
||
at the Boston Commons and takes you through the city to many
|
||
historical sights including the home of Paul Revere and the site of
|
||
the Boston Tea Party. The home of Benjamin Franklin (one of my heroes)
|
||
was nowhere to be found, even though it was marked on the map. I kept
|
||
thinking that for a country founded on revolution, we tend to be a
|
||
pretty docile crowd these days.
|
||
|
||
Walking from the south end of Boston to the Italian sector on the
|
||
other side of the city and back again wore us out, so we had some
|
||
coffee at The Other Side, a new caf<61> on Newbury St. They had wheat
|
||
grass shots to offer if one was brave enough.
|
||
|
||
Back at Stonehill, we relaxed while drinking Boston's "home brew"
|
||
Samuel Adams. Christine had been the ultimate tour guide.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Thursday 11/12/92
|
||
|
||
Went into Boston one more time and walked around to our favorite spots
|
||
and tried a slice of pizza with tortellini on it at Trio's, a
|
||
restaurant in the North End, which is the Italian sector. If you go
|
||
there, make sure you say hello to Louie -- Trio's friendly owner. Then
|
||
we headed back to New Jersey, a 4 hour drive which goes through 5
|
||
states.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Friday 11/13/92
|
||
|
||
This Friday we had some bad luck, but it was a fun night in NYC
|
||
anyway. We went to Wall St. to see all the strange people in 3-piece
|
||
suits running around and stuffing hot-dogs into their faces. Then we
|
||
walked from the World Trade Center through Soho to Greenwich Village.
|
||
It seems in Soho that every other person is a tourist and all I can
|
||
ask is, "Why Soho?" It's just an overly expensive neighborhood filled
|
||
with trendy clothes stores and art galleries that show stagnant art
|
||
work destined for the walls of corporate buildings. All the artists
|
||
that lived there and made it a thriving community have moved out long
|
||
ago because their rents went through the roof. (Many moved to
|
||
Brooklyn.)
|
||
|
||
So, anyway, we were supposed to go to Danceteria with my friend Sue
|
||
and then crash at her place. But that fell through so we had a very
|
||
indecisive period of bar hopping and wondering what to do. I called my
|
||
friend Paul but he decided to stay in. Darren wasn't home when I
|
||
called his NYC apartment. (I found out later he was in NJ looking for
|
||
us.) I had also forgotten to bring the phone number of Dawn, the only
|
||
other person I knew in NYC. So, over a pint of Guinness at Wally's, we
|
||
settled on seeing *Dracula* at the same theatre that my friend Adam
|
||
was seeing it and hook up with him afterwards. Well, when we got to
|
||
the theatre at 11:30 every movie was sold out, even the 2:00 am show.
|
||
(It was opening night.) So we decided to get some coffee and meet Adam
|
||
after the movie. We stopped at a few places and finally got coffee at
|
||
a cafe on Ave. A near 3rd St. where they had about 20 board games you
|
||
could play. "Operation!" was taken, so we immersed ourselves in a game
|
||
of checkers. We got so into it we lost all track of time. When I
|
||
looked at my watch it was over an hour later, and we had just finished
|
||
one game! It's a good thing we didn't play chess in that mindstate
|
||
(slight depression mixed with a lot of beer and 2 cups of coffee). We
|
||
had about 3 minutes till the end of the movie so we rushed back but
|
||
I'm sure we were too late because we couldn't find him. So we just
|
||
headed back to NJ. Friday the 13th indeed.
|
||
|
||
*****************
|
||
Saturday 11/14/92
|
||
|
||
Didn't do much because we had to leave early Sunday for Ohio, the
|
||
first stop on our express, 6 day drive back to San Francisco.
|
||
Basically we worked on Rodney (the car) and I collected some brightly
|
||
colored Autumn leaves for my flat-mate Shannon back in SF -- she
|
||
wanted to use them in her art. Darren came over and we talked of our
|
||
lack of plans in our lives at the moment. Neither of us had jobs or
|
||
were even in a band. Neither of us knew where we wanted to live next
|
||
or what to do with our lives. It was so sad. Then we smoked a bone
|
||
that he had brought as a going away present and I for one got really
|
||
plastered.
|
||
|
||
***************
|
||
Sunday 11/15/92
|
||
|
||
I'm not going to keep a journal of the trip home. We had to get back
|
||
to S.F. in 6 days so it was a lot of 12 hour drives and one night
|
||
crashes. A few crashes were with people we had already stayed with.
|
||
(We brought out-of-state beer to Norman, Oklahoma). We met a wonderful
|
||
person in Columbus, Ohio, named Roberta Cable and we crashed with
|
||
Eggboy and his girlfriend in Springfield, Missouri. And I had quite a
|
||
mini-adventure with cops in Albuquerque which I talk about elsewhere
|
||
in this issue.
|
||
|
||
Altogether, the trip changed my life and maybe the lives of people we
|
||
met. I hope others will be inspired by this travel tale to seek
|
||
adventure and knowledge not only in the places they go, but also and
|
||
more importantly, in the people they meet.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
"The whole object of travel is not to set foot on foreign land; it is
|
||
at last to set foot on one's own country as a foreign land."
|
||
-- G. K. Chesterton
|
||
|
||
|
||
---------------
|
||
BEYOND ORDINARY
|
||
by Miles Poindexter
|
||
|
||
What kind of night is it? Clear and cold. SHE is beautiful, and our
|
||
romance is only a day old. I am the stranger in HER world. But HER
|
||
world is strange. It is late, maybe 2am. We are in HER room,
|
||
discovering each other in the dim light of HER room lamp. Naked. An
|
||
undiscovered landscape unveiled in the night. Ecstasy. Our bodies
|
||
together in the midst of our own small journey.
|
||
|
||
Suddenly, HER door bursts open. Anger pours forth into the scented air
|
||
of HER room. A former lover vents HIS rage till HE is exhausted, then
|
||
turns away, engulfed in anguish. I am unchanged, still entranced by
|
||
HER, by our pleasure. But HE has told me I must leave. I dress, and go
|
||
to HIM. I must explain HER independence to HIM, and the sacred ground
|
||
of HER privacy that HE has trespassed on. The threats continue. Tribal
|
||
wars and machismo whirl in HIS mind. I stand undaunted.
|
||
|
||
HE summons the lords of order of modern civilization. HE calls the
|
||
police. In their presence, I explain the simple violation of HER
|
||
rights. HE begs to have HIS male ego gratified. Something is amiss.
|
||
The blue men are slaves of the law but...they are men. SHE is called
|
||
forth and attacked indirectly, slyly, by the officers.
|
||
|
||
"You have the right to bring 10 guys in here a night if you want, but
|
||
think of HIS feelings here..."
|
||
|
||
"Pretty soon you'll have to grow up, young lady."
|
||
|
||
"We don't know what HE might do to your new lover if HE gets enraged
|
||
enough..."
|
||
|
||
"Slut, whore, bitch" oozes forth from each officer in the testosterone
|
||
silence. One cop unlatches HIS gun after HER dog, sensing the verbal
|
||
attack on its master, growls at HIM.
|
||
|
||
The situation becomes surreal.
|
||
|
||
"Don't worry about me, officer," I say. "Why don't you just tell HIM
|
||
HER rights?"
|
||
|
||
"You shut up or we'll drag you to jail and make you shut up."
|
||
|
||
I am the filthy outsider, who sees through this thinly veiled reign of
|
||
terror against HER. I see their ridiculous fear of women, so strong
|
||
that they must band together now to verbally beat HER into submission.
|
||
I am the traitor to my kind.
|
||
|
||
"If we have to come back again, someone here is going to jail," both
|
||
officers say, staring at HER. SHE and I soon leave and walk towards a
|
||
friend's house.
|
||
|
||
"What if HE had a girl over, and you burst in, and told HER to get the
|
||
fuck out in a jealous rage, and then called these same 2 cops at 2am
|
||
in the morning?" I ask, shaking from the cold night.
|
||
|
||
"What if?" SHE says, knowing HER answer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------
|
||
VAGABOND GLOBETROTTING
|
||
by M.L. Endicott
|
||
|
||
Travel is experience. It has traditionally been considered the
|
||
ultimate education. Travel will not only teach you about the world,
|
||
but about yourself as well. It is also the ultimate sport. Travel
|
||
includes every possibility of life, and tests every faculty. It is
|
||
both work and play.
|
||
|
||
Life is a trip, from birth to death. We come from all, develop an
|
||
individual identity, and return to all. The first part of life is
|
||
concerned with self discovery, and the second part with self
|
||
transcendence. The quantity and quality of experience afforded by
|
||
travel surpasses imagination. It is intensified living, at times even
|
||
approaching the ecstatic. The travel experience is a metaphor for this
|
||
trip through life.
|
||
|
||
Travel is not tourism; travel is the alternative to tourism. Tourism
|
||
is industrialized travel, in fact the world's second largest industry.
|
||
It is a legacy of both imperialism and industrial revolution. As the
|
||
era of colonialism wanes, so too will the industrial-age give way to
|
||
the information-age. In turn, tourism will cease to be an assembly
|
||
line activity, geared toward generating a profit at the expense of the
|
||
Earth, and become an information intensive activity, enhancing the
|
||
leap toward global consciousness.
|
||
|
||
The distinction between tourism and travel is not a new one.
|
||
Technically, both are tourism and both are travel. Practically,
|
||
tourism is a consumer activity, whereas travel is a do-it-yourself
|
||
approach. Where tourism is wasteful, travel is energy efficient.
|
||
Tourism too often reinforces the status quo; in addition to
|
||
international frontiers, travel transcends social classes, or socio-
|
||
economic strata. Tourists vacation, take a ritualized break in
|
||
routine; travelers take a holiday, meaning literally "holy day," a
|
||
celebration of the sacred, the unity of all. While tourists seek
|
||
gratification, travelers may find both positive and negative
|
||
experiences equally enlightening. Tourists clamor to arrive at some
|
||
destination; travelers appreciate the journey as much as the
|
||
destination. Tourists surround themselves with a cultural bubble;
|
||
travelers attempt to experience local life as a native. Tourists
|
||
travel to find their expectations; travelers hope to return with new
|
||
insights. Tourists seek status and elitism, to live better than they
|
||
do at home; travelers seek humility and serendipity. Tourists count
|
||
new countries; travelers count new friends. Many cultures have
|
||
ritualized the transitions to self-actualization and self-
|
||
transcendence in the form of initiation or rite-of-passage. Such
|
||
rituals commonly consist of three phases: severance, threshold, and
|
||
return. The severance of travel is often symbolic of death. (Hence the
|
||
significance of the going-away party in our culture.) The self-testing
|
||
aspect of threshold experience mediates between innocence and wisdom.
|
||
The return embodies a new, re-created person, born again.
|
||
|
||
Native North Americans institutionalized the vision quest as a rite-
|
||
of-passage for initiating youngsters into adulthood, or coming-of-age.
|
||
Australian Aborigines developed the practice of walkabout for much the
|
||
same reason. The wander jahr and grand tour were similar experiences
|
||
for Europeans of different classes in previous centuries. Such
|
||
experiences were a form of self-testing, trials of strength or
|
||
endurance. In Moslem cultures, the haji pilgrimage to Mecca serves as
|
||
a rite-of-passage for those on the path returning to the
|
||
transpersonal.
|
||
|
||
Whether contemporary vision quest or walkabout, wander jahr or global
|
||
grand tour, the New Age haji, the 24,902 mile around-the-world mandala
|
||
is a modern expression of the archetypal theme of the hero's quest,
|
||
familiar in legend, myth, and dream.
|
||
|
||
-- Excerpted from the 176-page how-to book,
|
||
VAGABOND GLOBETROTTING: STATE OF THE ART (Cullowhee, North
|
||
Carolina, USA: Enchiridion International, 1989), copies of
|
||
which are available for US$8.95 each, postpaid, from him at
|
||
P.O. Box 837, Saint Simons Island, Georgia 31522-0437 USA.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----
|
||
"Travel, exotic experiences in foreign places, the sting of being and
|
||
living in an alien culture, and religious experiences are today's
|
||
ways by which the young find their identity."
|
||
-- Ronald Sandison, M.D.
|
||
(in *Albert Hofmann Foundation Bulletin,* Winter 1991)
|
||
|
||
|
||
----------------------
|
||
JOIN THE CRASH NETWORK!
|
||
|
||
Crasher: person who is traveling, guest.
|
||
Crashee: person who is allowing Crasher to sleep at residence,
|
||
host/hostess.
|
||
|
||
Joining is free! Send email to johnl@netcom.com for a questionnaire
|
||
(or send us an SASE to our mailing address, listed at the end of this
|
||
file). Filling it out and returning it gets you listed in our Crash
|
||
Directory, which is available only to members. Anytime you're planning
|
||
to travel, send $5 for an up-to-the-minute directory and follow the
|
||
guidelines below.
|
||
|
||
*************
|
||
HOW TO USE IT
|
||
|
||
You can use the Crash Directory to contact other members that you would
|
||
like to meet. Or if you have a destination or journey in mind, you can
|
||
use the directory to find potential crash sites along your planned route
|
||
(flexibility helps). Before your departure, contact your potential
|
||
crashee by mail, phone, or email and inquire about a visit. When all
|
||
your crashes are confirmed, you're ready to hit the proverbial road.
|
||
|
||
**************
|
||
THE CRASH CODE
|
||
|
||
1. Any Crashee can turn away a Crasher if they do not agree to the
|
||
Crash by prior consent.
|
||
2. No charge for stay unless agreed upon by both parties beforehand.
|
||
3. Toilet and shower facilities should be made available to Crasher
|
||
if possible.
|
||
4. Don't eat Crashee's food unless offered.
|
||
5. Don't use the Crashee's phone, stereo, TV or any other property
|
||
without their consent.
|
||
6. No stealing.
|
||
7. Don't bring friends over without the prior consent of the Crashee.
|
||
8. Treat each other with respect.
|
||
9. Help each other in every way possible during Crashes.
|
||
10. Crasher must obey rules of Crash Pad unless they contradict
|
||
above rules.
|
||
|
||
|
||
-----------------
|
||
CRASH INFORMATION
|
||
|
||
Editors: Miles Poindexter, John Labovitz.
|
||
|
||
Crash is published in January, March, May, July, September, and
|
||
November of each year.
|
||
|
||
Subscriptions are $5 for six issues. A sample issue is $1 or three
|
||
US 29c stamps. Back issues (text only) are available via anonymous FTP
|
||
at netcom.com in directory /pub/johnl/zines/crash. The printed issues
|
||
also contain illustrations and advertising; for the full Crash experience,
|
||
send for a printed sample.
|
||
|
||
Crash is happy to hear from you. Send artwork, articles, and aardvarks
|
||
to us at:
|
||
|
||
Crash
|
||
519 Castro Street #7
|
||
San Francisco, CA 94114 USA
|
||
email: johnl@netcom.com
|
||
|
||
If you are interested in advertising in the print or electronic
|
||
version of Crash, please contact us for rates and sizes.
|
||
|
||
Copyright (C) 1993 Crash. We encourage other zine editors to reprint
|
||
or excerpt parts of any articles written by us (Miles Poindexter or
|
||
John Labovitz). All we ask is that information about this magazine and
|
||
the network be included with it. If you wish to reprint something by
|
||
an outside contributor, please contact them beforehand (either by
|
||
their contact information listed after the article, or c/o Crash).
|
||
|
||
|
||
------------------
|
||
END OF CRASH JAN93
|