From a Student of the Seventies to a Student of the Teens

This weekend, my wife and I will drop our son off for his freshman year of college.  I am anticipating an emotional parting; after all, it was me, not his mother, who used to get up at six in the morning when he was five to take him to hockey, or vice versa.  I mean five in the morning when he was six, not that he would drive me to hockey.


“Okay, you got your picture, you can go now.”

In the pregnant moment before I hug him to say goodbye, I plan to pass on the wisdom I accumulated as a college student four decades ago; the lessons I learned at great cost, but which I pass on without charge.  Such as, if you take the same course twice taught by a different professor each time, you will probably get a better grade the second time.  Seriously.  It helps your GPA.


“You got into Northwestern?  But this is Boston!”

But there is more to life than the spiritual and intellectual aspects of our existence.  There are also the mundane physical remnants of my college days, which I have lovingly preserved since that day in 1969 when I matriculated all over my college campus because the bathrooms weren’t ready yet.  Here are a few of the artifacts that I plan to pass on to my impressionable college freshman.

 
This thing is like wicked fast.

Smith-Corona Manual Typewriter:  I don’t think you’re ready for an electric yet, son.  I know too many kids who have taken a high-powered typewriter out for a spin on a Saturday night after a long week of classes only to crash into a carrel at the library, killing paperback copies of The Importance of Being Earnest and Plato’s Republic.  Which are available in Books-on-Tape format, by the way.


Frye boots.

Everybody will be wearing these when you get to school.  Seriously.  I mean, everybody who was anybody wore them in the fall of 1969.  You’re not listening, are you?


8-Track, multi-LP stereo system.

This is a somewhat delicate subject, son.  Your mother and I understand that you will want to have girls up into your dorm room, and that if your roommate is out of town for the Interscholastic Parcheesi Sectional Tournament you will have the place all to yourself for several days.  When that happens, you can stack up to four LP’s on the spindle of this baby, and let nature take its course.  When the last one drops and you’ve heard Mitch Ryder and the Detroit Wheels sing “Devil With the Blue Dress On” forty-two times in succession, it’s time to go to class.


My albums

I can’t tell you how cool my album collection is.  Was.  Back when.  As a matter of fact, I have albums by groups you’ve never even heard of.  Like “Poco,” which was a spin-off from, uh, The Buffalo Springfield.  I think.  What do you mean, are they available in MP3 format.  Do you mean the MC5–like “Kick Out the Jams”?


MC5:  Gone, and one hopes, forgotten.


Husserl/Heidegger/Nietzsche: Gesundheit.

I’m giving you my well-thumbed copies of Thus Spake Zarathustra (Nietzsche), Being and Time (Heidegger), and Experience and Judgment (Husserl) with this admonition: If it sounds like a sneeze, don’t take the course.

Biker Gangs Show Poetic Side With “Baiku”

MAYNARD, Mass.  It’s Thursday night at the Sitting Duck Pub, a biker bar in this Massachusetts town of 10,000.  A reporter asks Darlene Rivers, a thirty-something woman in a tube top, whether anyone is sitting on the empty bar stool next to her.  “Not right now,” she says after blowing cigarette smoke out of the side of her mouth, “but if my old man comes in and sees you sitting there, you’d better have good health insurance.”

Darlene is here because of her self-proclaimed “artistic” side, which she says finds expression in the many Harley-Davidson tattoos on her upper arms and her love of poetry.  “I’m here every week for the verse,” she says as she flips her long hair back over her shoulder.  “‘Oh what a tangled web we weave’ and all that kinda stuff.”


“If you even so much as touch my hog, I’ll come to your house and poison your dog.”

As she takes a sip of her beer, Gene Dominici, the first performer of the evening, takes the stage to read a sampling of his biker poetry, a gas, chrome and rubber genre of folk poetry that has become popular as a result of the publication of the anthology “Rubber Side Down”, a collection of poems written by bikers.

Domenici leads with a “baiku,” a variation on haiku, the Japanese short-poem format.

Full tank, old lady
on the saddle.  I turn, she
says “Let’s go, Pig Pen.”

A murmur of appreciation rises from the crowd.  “Sweet,” says Oran “Big Dude” Swartski, who has ridden his 2006 Indian Chief Roadmaster over 150 miles to be here tonight.  “Give the man a Slim Jim,” Swartski calls out to the bartender, who tosses one of the convenient beef jerky sticks that many bikers subsist on over long road trips onto the stage. 

Next up is Floyd “Hard Times” Daniels, whose Harley-Davidson Low Rider FXRS announces his approach from several blocks off whenever he has a new poem ready to read to the Sitting Duck aficionadoes.  He takes a swig of his Pabst Blue Ribbon beer, clears his throat, and adopts a pastoral tone that reveals the beauty of the world as seen through the bug-splattered goggles of a biker:


Some guys ride hills up and down,
Then stop to terrorize small towns.
Me, I’d rather have my fun
On an autumn day for a poker run.
“That was so–freaking–beautiful,” Darlene says, and it is clear that she has been touched by the emotions that Daniels has so skillfully evoked by the image of a biker with his girlfriend picking up the winning hand at a motorcycle club’s fund-raising event. 


“I promise I won’t call your bike a ’scooter’ if you won’t refer to my breasts as ‘hooters’.”

Daniels graciously cedes the microphone to Jim “B.S.” deJong, a symbolist whose bike of choice is a Kawasaki ZX-6R Ninja.

 
deJong is a devotee of Samuel Taylor Coleridge, and like the author of “Kubla Khan”, he’s not above a little chemical stimulation to get his creative rivers flowing:


Whose hog this is, I think I know
His straightpipes have that healthy glow.
He will not see me stopping here
To deal a little high-grade blow.
Last, but certainly not least, is last week’s winning poet Carson “Mudflap” Poquette, who honed his literary skills while incarcerated for aggravated assault in a medium-security prison.  His style is edgy, fueled by rage and the ravages of social diseases he’s picked up over a long life of drunken one-night stands.
When down I bring my pool cue (maple)
Upon a roadhouse bumper table.
Be sure upon the felt of green
Your head ain’t sitting, or your spleen.
The crowd is quiet for a moment, then the sound of applause is heard, soft at first, then building to a crescendo as the audience absorbs the delicate tracery of Poquette’s four-line, a-a-b-b rhyme scheme over the subtext of a not-so-thinly veiled threat.

”You’ve got my vote,” yells Dominici as he heads for the exit.

”Mine too,” calls out Daniels, who quickly settles up with the bartender.

The only poet to stand his ground, however unsteadily, is deJong, who rises and staggers to the stage with menace on his face.  “You call yourself a poet,” he fairly spits out.

”You got a problem with that?” Poquette snarls back at him.

”Yeah,” de Jong says.  “You put a period at the end of the second line–it should have been a comma.”

Zombie & Zombie, Attorneys at Law

       “Are there really, truly zombies in Haiti?”

          “Bien sur,” Delzor said.  He had even seen them: affectless men and women with a deathlike pallor, high nasal voices, and the characteristic drooping at the chin.

          Into the Zombie Underworld, Mischa Berlinski, Men’s Journal

 

It was getting late, and my eyes were tired.  I leaned back in my executive swivel chair and wheeled it around to look out the window.  I saw what I always see—other people driving home, or walking the streets of Boston on their way to have fun, while I stayed in the office poring over boring legal documents.  With every set of by-laws I drafted, with every trust indenture I read, I died a little.

Into the reflection on my window moved the grey figure of Alison McDaniels, employment lawyer.  I turned around to greet her.

“Hi Alison—how are you?”

“fine i guess,” she said in her emotionless monotone that seemed somehow more monotonous than usual.

“You guess?  Well if you don’t know, who do I ask?” I said, trying to cheer her up a bit.

“i don’t know,” she said, with a distracted look in her eye as she stared out my window over my shoulder.  “don’t ask my husband we never see each other.”

 Can’t say that’s a bad thing, I thought to myself.  What could possibly be worse than a two-lawyer couple?  Maybe being dead in a ditch, but if that’s your situation at least you’re out in the fresh air.  Here—or at her husband’s firm—you spent the better part of your life under fluorescent lights, never seeing the sun.

“You taking any time off this summer?” I asked, lamely, hoping to get her mind off of whatever was troubling her.

“no can’t.  life-destroying case just came in the door.  i’ll be busy ‘til the end of the year with this one.”

Nobody ever accused Allison of not carrying her weight around the firm.  She usually billed more hours than just about anyone else, which accounted for her deathlike pallor.

“Well, maybe just a day trip to the beach some weekend . . .”

“don’t think so.  i have very sensitive skin.”

Excuse me for trying to cheer you up, I thought to myself.  I gave her a little nod to show that I understood her predicament.  Go ahead and be miserable if you want.

As I sat there like a bobble-head doll who should appear at my door but Norm Sternklein, tax lawyer extraordinary.  Norm was one of these lawyers who they’d have to carry out feet first; he wasn’t going to retire unless the executive committee made him.

“Hey, Norm,” I said, glad to have someone to divert my attention from the Gloomy Gertie sitting in front of me.

“hi how are you,” he said in the high nasal voice that always seemed so . . . strange coming out of the mouth of the 250-pound, round-shouldered dean of the Boston tax bar.

“Staying late tonight?” I asked.

“no later than usual,” he replied.  “like to stay abreast of recent developments.  I’ve been buried alive just reading the new changes to the tax code.”  Yeah, right.  Translation: “I have no life.”

“You guys want to order some food?” I suggested.  Maybe they had low blood sugar and needed a pick-me-up.  “Pizza?  Chinese?”

“there’s a little haitian place down by quincy market,” Alison said.

“yes they have good flesh—i mean fresh food,” Norm added.

“Okay, looks like we have a consensus,” I said as I turned my phone towards Alison.  “Give them a call.”

I was hoping they would just order salads.  They were both starting to get that drooping chin so many middle-aged lawyers get from lack of exercise.  You get in the car in the morning, sit at your desk all day, talking on the phone or tapping on your keyboard.  It’s no wonder so many members of the profession keeled over in their fifties and sixties, right on the verge of retirement, so they never really got a chance to live.

Alison dialed the number and we heard the number ringing over my speaker phone.

“Voodoo Kitchen,” a voice said when the call went through.

“i’d like to place a take-out order,” Alison said in her affectless tone of voice.  “are you ready?”

“Just a second,” the man at the other end said.  “Okay—go.”

“i’ll have the creole basket,” she said.

“That comes with a choice of two sides—slaw, baked beans and fries.”

“just a diet coke and extra hot sauce on the creole, whoever he may be.”

“Okay—next?”

“i’ll have the bucket o’ chicken entrails,” Norm said.  He seemed to have perked up a bit—the prospect of food was all it took sometimes.

“Anything to drink?”

“no,” Norm said.  “but could you leave the heads on the chickens?”

“Sure,” the man said.  “One bucket o’ entrails, heads on.  Anything else?”

I looked at my two partners, and they stared back at me.  I took the menu from Alison—Haitian wasn’t my cup of tea, but I wanted to be collegial.

“Let’s see—the Toad and Mixed Green Salad.  Does that have any nuts in it, because I’m allergic to them.”

“No nuts, sir.  It’s made from free-range females,” came the reply.

“Sounds good.  And a root beer if you have it.”

“Okay–that’ll be $27.50, not including tip.”

I reached for my wallet and realized I had no cash.  “Say, could one of you loan me a ten?” I asked.

“sure, you’ll pay me back with interest, right?” Norm asked.  It sounded like a joke, but he wasn’t smiling.

“Oh, so you’ve got to get your pound of flesh, huh?” I replied with a nervous laugh.

“sure,” Norm said, without expression.  “if that’s what you’d prefer.”

The Madness of Mass Dance

We walk, each with ear phones in place, as if through so many self-contained concert halls; the crowd of commuters who disembark from the train, the hordes of travelers moving through an airport terminal.


South Station, Boston

Each person listens to his or her own private sound track, and everyone gets where they’re going.  If the speakers in those little white buds were directed outwards and cranked up a notch, of course, the platform or concourse through which the people pass would be transformed.  Where once there was order, a tinny cacophony would prevail.


“The 5:15 Soul Train to Framingham is now boarding on Track #1.”

A thousand individual choices in the same place is made possible by electronic privacy, and yet something is lost; the sense of bogus community that is imposed by those high-minded municipal reading projects in which citizens are encouraged to read and talk about the same book for a season.  Wouldn’t we feel better about ourselves and our fellow man and woman if we all–danced together on our way to work?


Chaka Khan: Sang “I’m Every Woman,” and is starting to weigh about as much.

I know I would.  I look about me as the 6:05 a.m. train comes to a stop and see a number of people who I know would enjoy Chaka Khan’s “I Feel for You”–if only they could hear it.  Together, we might glide across the slick stone floors of South Station in unison, with a segue into a Busby Berkeley-style formation during Stevie Wonder’s chromatic harmonica break.  Alas, they can’t hear it.


Robin Collingwood:  Fortunately, did not live to see “Pants Off Dance Off”

Dance, according to British philosopher Robin Collingwood, was the original art form, and yet it has devolved into a spectator sport today.  Less than a generation ago a man and a woman could be expected to continue social dancing into their dotage, because there were modes of dance that were calibrated to reflect the decline in human agility with age.  The couple that danced the Charleston or jitterbug in their youth could waltz or fox trot in their golden years.  You paid your respects to another man’s tastes by dancing with his wife, perhaps whetting your appetite for your own.


Busby Berkeley dancers

Like sex, dance has both a social aspect and an irrational side.  Outbreaks of mass communal dancing–sometimes referred to as “choreomania”–occurred in Europe with some frequency in Europe between the 14th and the 18th centuries.  In some cases there was a link to a concurrent phenomenon–one variety that came to be known as St. John’s Dance sprang up during the time of the Black Death. 


St. Anthony’s Fire, St. John’s Dance

The Dancing Plague of 1518 manifested itself along pilgrimage routes.  St. Anthony’s Fire, a mania accompanied by visions similar to those produced by the drug LSD, has been traced to consumption of grain products contaminated with fungus.


“Brother” Jack McDuff

If Freud is right about anything, it is that we suppress the irrational at our peril–it is, paradoxically, irrational to ignore the irrational.  This is not to suggest that you should go nuts when communal dancing takes over your town.  I would recommend starting out with something really cool by “Brother” Jack McDuff, jazz organist, broadcast over the emergency speakers at the National Guard Armory used to warn of tornados.


“I have to cancel your appointment.  My last patient ran over and I have a rhumba lesson at 3:30.”

You may arrive at the office a bit sweatier than you normally would, but that’s a small price to pay for the feelings of communal pride and bonhomie that you will have engendered. 

Just remember–dance at the green, not in between.

A Day in the Life of a Hip-Hop Grants Administrator

Rocco Landesman, new chairman of the National Endowment for the Arts, says he will open up funding to rap artists. 

                                                             The Wall Street Journal

I was sitting at my desk, tapping out rejection letters to the poets, community theatre groups and local symphony orchestras whose pending applications sat on my desk like stacks of flapjacks to be consumed in one of those epic pancake-eating battles of the 60′s between Eugene “Big Daddy” Lipscomb and Ernie “Big Cat” Ladd.


“I am pleased to inform you that we will not be funding
plangent voices this year.  Or ever.”

It wasn’t easy to tell the Water Tower Players of Tipton, Missouri, that the $1,500 grant they had requested for lighting and props was being denied.  It choked me up to write to Jim McKeskie, the leading mime in the Quad Cities region of Iowa, that he would not be getting the $500 he needed to replenish his whiteface supply.  It’s a tough job being a grants administrator for the National Endowment for the Arts, but somebody’s got to do it. 


Eugene “Big Daddy” Lipscomb:  He can outeat you.

Then I spotted a familiar letterhead–that of plangent voices, the little poetry journal edited by my former lover, elena gotchko.


elena:  “don’t do it!”

elena and I had broken up nearly a decade ago after she had asked me which side I liked better, the long or the short, as she was in the middle of her monthly self-administered haircut.

“Uh, the long one,” I had said, naively.

Now you tell me,” she said, so angry she forgot to downshift to a lower case letter to start her sentence.


“We all cut our own hair.  Blondie here uses a hammer and chisel.”

“Well, now you asked me,” I replied, quite reasonably I thought.  But there’s no reasoning with a woman who self-aestheticizes–if that’s a word–in the hope that it will make her stand out in the crowded field of disturbed young poetesses.  What elena didn’t realize–because she was so self-absorbed–is that all of her competitors had been cutting their own hair since they got their My Little Poetess Home Beauty Kits as girls.

So it was a distinct pleasure to tell elena that she wouldn’t be getting the $1,250 for “community outreach” she had asked for.  Community outreach my foot; if I knew elena and her staff, they would have blown it all on lattes as they sat around shooting the breeze in the espresso joint downstairs from their shabby offices.


“Has anybody out there got the version of Adobe Reader that is supported by Grants.gov?”

The reason for this wholesale bloodletting was the directive handed down by the new boss, Obama appointee Rocco Landesman.  D-Rock, as he styled himself, had decreed, after descending from his own private Mt. Sinai with the President, that he would be funding rap artists in an effort to “keep it real.” 


Rocco “D-Rock” Landesman:  Funny, you don’t look hip-hop.

So out with The American Jazz Repertory Orchestra.  Eighty-six on the Toledo Ballet.  Ix-nay on the illiams-Way useum-May of odern-May ulpture-Scay.  From now on, rap ruled.

I had prepared for the new regime by acquiring a rap nickname of my own–Two Spinner–using a free, on-line rap star name generator.  I had bookmarked a rap-to-English translation engine on my computer so I could separate the gangstas from the wankstas who applied for federal funding.  Your tax dollars at work!

I heard gunfire, and looked up to see two young men whom I recognized from the mean streets of the ‘hood around the NEA’s headquarters at 1100 Pennsylvania Avenue; Sound E-Fex, an up-and-coming rapper, and his rap sidekick, BackWurdz.

“Can I help you?” I asked.

“Your door was open, so we couldn’t knock,” Sound said.

“My door’s always open–that’s our new policy,” I said cheerfully.  “Come right in.”

“Thanks,” Wurdz said.

“Have a seat,” I said, indicating the two chairs in front of my desk.  “What can I do for you?”

“We’d like to apply for a federal grant,” Sound said.

“Well, you’ve come to the right place!” I said.  “In fact, this is the only place to be if you’re looking for federal money to support your artistic endeavors.”  I reached in my desk drawer and pulled out Application for Federal Assistance SF 424.


SF 424:  Fun with federal forms!

“Will you be applying individually, or as a ‘crew’?” I asked.

They looked at each other, and I sensed tension between the two.

“Which way do we get mo’ money?” Wurdz asked.

“Well, our policy in the recent past has been to fund artistic groups since Karen Finley got an NEA grant for smearing chocolate all over herself,” I said.


Karen Finley:  Uh, actually I prefer strawberry.

“So–together?” Sound asked.

“Well, we’re changing,” I said, making a little church-and-steeple with my finger tips and looking off into the distance.  “We’re thinking of funding individual artists again.”

“Okay,” Wurdz said.  “I’m fillin’ out my own.”

I handed them each a form and a no. 2 lead pencil and they got to work.

“The boxes are too small,” Sound said.  “I can’t fit ‘izzle’ on the end of any words.”


Anacostia

“Use an asterisk,” I suggested.  That seemed to mollify him–no mean feat, as the posse of a rap rival had once tried to mollify him in the tough Anacostia district and had died tryin’.

“I don’t have an asterisk,” Wurdz complained.

“I ain’t got no asterisk,” I corrected him, as I reached in my desk drawer and pulled out a box of the punctuation marks from Staples.


Large economy box of asterisks on sale this week at Staples!

“Thanks, dawg,” he said and got back to work.  The questions on the form are tough–the U.S. government isn’t going to hand out money to just any old rapper hanging out on a corner.  We want fresh ‘n nasty stuff, the kind that tells it like it is on the streets of our nation, where wankstas cross at the green, and gangstas in between.

I helped them as best as I could without tilting the pinball machine too much in their favor.  I’m not just a bureaucrat–I’m an advocate, darn it!–and I want to see kids today going into hip-hop because it’s an industry with a future, unlike banking and automobiles, two sick dogs that the federal government had to save from themselves. 

 The two artists finished their paperwork and handed it back to me.

“How long we got to wait?” Wurdz asked.

“Well, this is the federal government,” I replied with just a hint of sarcasm in my voice.

“So what’s that mean?” Sound asked.

“You should be hearing from us sometime within the next six months, but you can check your application on-line at any time through Grants.gov by using your username and password . . .”

“I don’t want to do dat shit,” Wurdz snapped at me.  “I want my money now!”


da Benjamin

“Chill dawg,” Sound said.  He seemed to be having second thoughts.  “If we take da Benjamins from you,” he asked, “we be like . . . bureaucrats–right?”

“That’s right–I think you’d be slotted at a GS-7 pay scale.”

“And there ain’t never been no government ever funded any art dat’s worth a shit, right?”

He had me there.  I thought of the tons of dreck that is stored in warehouses in The Netherlands, the unintended harvest of that nation’s program of grants to, shall we say, marginal artists.  You get what you subsidize.


The Pink People:  Actual recipients of Dutch national arts grant.

Wurdz was starting to get the message.  “So if we take this money, people gonna think we wankstas?”

“Yeah,” Sound replied.  “We won’t be fo’ real anymore.”

They looked at each other, then at me.  “You can keep yo money,” Sound said.  “Our fershizzlin’ artistic integrity ain’t fo sale.”

Trailer Park T’ai Chi Brings Wisdom of Orient to Midwest

CHILLICOTHE, Missouri.  Lamar Gene Lange is a retired telephone lineman with a gut that hangs over his “International Harvester” belt-buckle, evidence of his fondness for red meat, beer and fried foods.  “I figure life’s too short to deny yourself simple pleasures,” like the steak tip platter with Texas fries he is tucking into at the Dew Drop Inn, a bar that is his home-away-from-home.


Home-away-from home-away-from-home

But Lamar’s wife has been nagging him to do something about his high blood pressure, which has affected his performance in bed.  After he finishes his dinner special and washes it down with a pitcher of Pabst Blue Ribbon Beer, he makes his way over to the senior center in this town of 9,000 in north central Missouri to try what his friends jokingly refer to as “Trailer Park T’ai Chi,” an updated version of the ancient Chinese “soft” martial art that emphasizes balance, slow movements and relaxed breathing over the tense, hard-edged gestures familiar to fans of Jackie Chan movies.

His wife Velena has told Lamar she won’t make fried chicken, lemon meringue pies or sweet potatoes covered with Kraft Jet-Puffed Miniature Marshmallows for him until he shapes up, so Lamar plunks down twenty dollars–”That hurts,” he exclaims with a wince–for a ticket good for five classes with Edward Elliot, an instructor trained in the Yang style of the ancient discipline.  “It’s just somethin’ I gotta go through with if I ever want to see anything but rabbit food”–salad–”on the table again,” Lange says.

Elliot learned t’ai chi chuan as one of the first men to attend Vassar College in Poughkeepsie, New York, and his patrician bearing is softened by a gentle aura that befits his role as purveyor of a genteel Asian art form to the American masses.  “I’ve learned that I must present t’ai chi in a different way for an audience that is so far removed from its Oriental roots,” he notes as he calls the class to order and begins with the traditional Qishi or “commencement” posture.

 
“Why would a pretty blonde girl like you die her roots black?”

“Let us move on,” Elliot says after the class has completed the first exercise.  He adopts a stance that signals the traditional “Part the Wild Horse’s Mane” form, but he calls it by a different name.  “Will everyone assume the ‘Part the Hair of the Skanky Barmaid for a Bleachjob’ position, please?” he says, and the students imitate him with varying degrees of success.

Nae Ann Wingo, a barmaid at the Dew Drop Inn, says she is not offended by Elliot’s invocation of the archetypical figure that she herself embodies.  “I don’t really care,” she says as she chews a stick of Juicy Fruit gum.  “I tried to get into the Buns of Steel class but it was full up.”

“Now,” Elliot continues, “please Embrace the ‘Possum, and Repulse the Repo Man five times.” Nae Ann performs this routine flawlessly.  “No problemo–I’ve stopped Household Finance from takin’ my air conditioner plenty of times,” she says.  “I need it to cool my pits when I get off work.”

Lamar is new to t’ai chi and his movements are unsteady since he hasn’t yet developed the sense of balance that is characteristic of more proficient students.  “Goddamn it,” he says as he topples over.  “I probably shoulda just had a couple long necks instead of a whole pitcher of beer with dinner,” he mutters to himself.

 
“Repo man would rather die on his feet, than live on his knees.”

“If everyone will please pay attention now,” Elliot says in a voice that is both calm and authoritative.  “Our next movement is a Right Grasp Chicken Fried Steak, followed by a Left Grasp Bag of Pork Rinds.”  Lamar’s mouth begins to water at the mention of two of his favorite foods, but he steadies himself and completes a passable imitation of his instructor.


Chicken fried steak:  “I didn’t order parsley!”

The class winds down as Elliot demonstrates the Americanized version of “Needle at Sea Bottom,” a position that requires the students to balance on one foot while they lean over as if to pick up a minute object from the floor.  “This position is called ‘Pick Up Last Quarter for Keno Machine,’” he says.  “I want you to think of what you would buy with the big jackpot if you can successfully retrieve your lost coin from the floor and drop it in the slot.”

An expression of peaceful calm comes over Lamar’s face. “I’m buyin’ a bass boat!” he says, and Elliot realizes he has achieved a breakthrough with his new student.

 

“You have reached a state of taijitu,” or a balance between the yin and yang forces, he explains to Lange.  “As Yang Chenfu says, ‘From ultimate softness comes ultimate hardness.’”

“If that’s the case, I’m done,” Lange says.

“We are near the end of class,” Elliot replies agreeably.

“No, I mean I want my money back,” Lange says.  “I was only doin’ this so my old lady would put my feedbag back on.  Once she’s taken care of, I’d rather go night fishing on Twin Lakes than have her latch onto me and snuggle.”

Off-Duty Copy Jockeys Say “Pimp My Xerox”

LOS ANGELES, California. Rodney Gage spends his day hunched over a photocopy machine at a 200-person law firm in Century City. “You wouldn’t believe the crap I have to put up with,” he says as he staples an 80-page bond indenture together. “‘I told you to do it two-sided,’ or ‘I wanted it on 8½ by 11!’ What do they think I am—a photostatic professional or a baby sitter?”


Modified street rod.

When he gets off work, Gage likes to relieve his frustrations by what some people would consider a busman’s holiday. He takes a souped-up photocopier out into the streets of East Los Angeles, where he and other “copy jockeys” parade their high-performance machines in a macho dance of office equipment hardware.

“My work copier is my ball-and-chain,” he says with a smile on his face as he clears a jam in a paper tray. “This baby”—a lovingly restored Xerox Model 0800 from the late ’60′s—”is an expression of my personality.


Early prototype

Gage’s “rod” or “hog” has been customized in the style made famous by the MTV hit show “Pimp My Ride”, with a supercharged drive train, a stereo system that features a six-disc CD player, and an espresso machine and a cup holder for his chrome coffee thermos. “This baby’s loaded,” he says.


Yeah, baby!

As he rolls down the street Otis Redding’s “Happy Song” blasts from his speakers, and Rodney hums along with the late soul great. “Dum-dum-dilly-dee-dum-dum—do it again,” he sings, and it is clear that the ladies on the sidewalk like the cut of his copier’s jib. “This thing is a poontang magnet,” he says. “I used to just have one of those little Canon jobbies, and I was always hornier than a two-peckered billy goat.”


In the shop.

Xerography is an electrostatic reproduction technology invented in 1937 by Chester F. Carlson and developed by the Xerox Corporation.  An image is exposed to a plate causing electrically-charged particles to adhere to a photoconductive surface, impregnating a piece of paper which gives birth to a copy after a nine-hour gestation period. “Styling” through the streets with a refurbished copier thus has sexual overtones that are not lost on eligible women, and some who are ineligible.

“Yoo-hoo—Rodney!” one woman calls as Gage makes a right-hand turn onto Spring Street. “Why you got your hand up in the air like that?”

“Robert-Louis-Stevenson—right, left, stop,” he replies, repeating the mnemonic device used to recall the standard bicycle hand turn signals.

“That’s a nice-lookin’ copier you got there.”

“Tell me somethin’ I don’t know, baby,” he says with a laugh.

“How many sheets a minute?”

“Thirty-one!” he responds with pride.


“I can collate too, baby!”

“Ooo-wee!” the woman exclaims. “You wanna be reproducin’ somethin’ for me?” the woman asks suggestively, but Rodney is too busy.

“Take your report down to Kinko’s baby—I ain’t got time!”

As Rodney casts one last, admiring glance in the woman’s direction disaster strikes; a fully-loaded Lexus driven by a Hollywood producer’s 18 year-old son comes careening around the corner and crashes into the classic copier, totaling it.


Kinko’s:  Ho-hum.

“Hey, man! What’s the freakin’ idea?” Rodney screams, a tone of desolation in his voice.

“Sorry,” the boys says.

“My baby!” Rodney sobs as he bends over the wreckage.

“My dad will buy you a new one.”

Rodney perks up a bit. “Really?” he asks.

“Whatever you want,” says the kid.


This baby’s loaded!

“Like, say, a Sharp AR-275 Digital Imager, new-in-the-box with an automatic single pass document feed and printer interface upgrade?”

“If that’s what it takes,” the kid says with a shrug.

“Thanks—thanks a lot,” Rodney says. “I’ll let you be the first to hop on the glass and make a copy of your butt!”

Handicapping the Saints

I’ve been a fan of hagiography–the lives of the saints–since first grade when Claude Dunham and I were asked to represent St. Stephen and St. Sebastian, two martyrs of the early church, in a tableau vivant of bored boys.  Not content to stand in silence while Sister Mary Agnesita recited the manner of our deaths, we each took the Method Acting approach when our turns came and . . . uh . . . embellished our performances with groans and contortions of pain as we were killed, respectively, by stones and arrows.


St. Stephen, getting stoned

I’ve maintained an interest in the annual pennant race for sainthood even as I came to follow baseball, basketball, football and late in life, hockey.  The nuns and priests who make it to the playoffs are, unlike today’s spoiled, overpaid pro athletes, modest team players, subordinating their personal stats to the greater glory of God and the salvation of mankind.  That doesn’t stop me from laying down a friendly wager every now and then with Maury, my bookie, however.


St. Sebastian:  Even in the twilight of his career, the guy kept himself in great shape.

I was itching for a little action just last night.  The Sox were losing, and I see no point in betting on NFL preseason games, so I gave Maury a call.

“Y’ello,” I heard him say in his familiar cigar-tinged voice.

“Maury, it’s me,” I said.

“Hey–how’s my favorite mark?”

That hurt.  A few years ago when the Patriots were killing it, beating the spread every Sunday, a lot of bookies got wiped out.  I figured the law of averages was against them, and almost single-handedly kept Maury in business.

“Fine,” I said, gritting my teeth.  He’s like that, always goading you to lay your money down by needling you.

“What can I dooze fur ya?”

“I’m thinking of putting some money on the saints.”

“The over/under against Houston is 40 1/2.”

“Not those Saints, the saints in Heaven.”

“Oh, okay.  Lessee, who do you like?”

“What’s the line on Pierre Toussaint?”


Pierre Toussaint

“He’s the odds-on favorite.  Can’t give you no better than 7 to 5.”

“Aw, come on, Maury.  I might as well buy a lottery ticket.”

“Look, you mook.  He’s Haitian, and he was a hairdresser who served the Protestant elite of New York, so he’s a three-fer; black, aesthetical and ecumenical.  He’s a shoo-in.”

I could tell I wasn’t going to move Maury on a man who, in the words of The Wall Street Journal, “has been inching toward sainthood ever since his death in 1853.”  There’s no money to be made on sentimental favorites.


Rev. Augustus Tolton

“How about Augustus Tolton?” I asked in the most ingenuous tone I could muster.

“Who?” Maury asked.  Bingo–I’d caught him without the inside dope a handicapper needs to make his vigorish.

“He’s . . . uh . . . a pretty good guy.  Lotta people think he’s a comer, but he’s got the Curse of the Cubs thing going.”

“He’s from Illinois?”  I could hear Maury riffling through his Street & Smith’s Sainthood Yearbook.

“Yeah–Quincy, on the Mississippi.”

“I don’t got nothin’ on him,” Maury said.  If only he’d pick up a copy of the Oxford Dictionary of the Saints instead of the Daily Racing Form every now and then, he might learn something.

“He’s a pretty good guy.”

“Let me look him up,” Maury said.  “Hmm–the only ‘T’ in the oddsmakers book is for Teresa,  Blessed of Calcutta.  She’s off the boards.”


“Children, live by this rule:  On the road, take the points.”

“I figured as much.  No Tolton’s a rookie.  They just formed a commission on him to see if he merits sainthood.”

“Hmm.  So whadda ya thinkin’?”

I inhaled, then took the plunge.  “I dunno–I’ll lay ya five ta one he’s venerable this year, ten ta one he’s beatified in 2011.”

I heard a tapping sound.  Maury was probably checking Vegas and Atlantic City to see what the smart money was thinking.  “Wait a minute,” I heard him say.

“What?”

“This guy Tolton–he was born into slavery, and was the first black American priest.”

“So?”

“Are you kidding?  That’s like bein’ on steroids.  And he had an integrated congregation.  You’re tryin’ to sandbag me.”

“No I’m not–I’m just . . . “

“Fuhgeddabout it,” Maury said just before slamming down his phone.  “You can’t hustle a hustler.”

The Surrealist Corrections Department

CORRECTION:  In the Leisure and Arts story, “Fantastical Images of Dance–a Surrealist’s Work Goes on View After 50 Years,” Brett Littman said that he had seen a costume drawing of a squid atop a pile of other drawings at Dorothea Tanning’s archive.  Mr. Littman did not see a costume drawing featuring a squid at her archive.  The Wall Street Journal

            In the May edition of “Splattered Pants: The Absurdist’s Guide to Pigeon Racing,” it was incorrectly reported that Antonin Artaud’s sister uses roll-on deodorant.  Mr. Artaud has no sister, and she uses Mitchum Extra-Wet Spray-On Protection deodorant.  Splattered Pants regrets its error.

            In the Tuesday, June 1st edition of Vortex: The Poetry Journal for French Bidet Industry Professionals, Marcel Duchamp was quoted as saying “There is no art without toilets.”  A review of the reporter’s tape recording of the interview with Monsieur Duchamp reveals that he in fact said “Where is the lavatory, and why are you eating steel wool?”  Vortex stands corrected.

            In the annual Christmas double-issue of Au Poivre Dans La Gateaux, Eugene Ionesco’s right ear lobe was inadvertently included in the “Scratch ‘n Sniff” pull-out card.  Monsieur Ionesco’s ingrown toenail should have been included.  Readers who received the incorrect insert can jump off a chair onto a dust-bunny for all the editors care.

            A printing error in yesterday’s Le Jeux d’Escargot resulted in an erroneous price for the 1.5 litre bottle of L’Esprite, the refreshing lemon-lime soft drink.  The price when converted from Celsius to Fahrenheit is your parrot’s fedora.

            A “hoky” is a lightweight wet-dry sweeper made by Oreck; a “hokie” is the mascot of Virginia Tech.  A photo caption in yesterday’s Mal heure est-il? beneath a photograph of Nicholas Sarkozy doing the hokey-pokey improperly suggested that he was doing the Funky Penguin.  The editors deny any intentional implication to the contrary. 

            In the Summer Cookout issue Andre Breton’s name was misspelled as “buffalos.”  The plural of Monsieur Breton’s name is formed without adding an “s,” and should be cooked on high heat for no more than 8 minutes per side.  We deeply regret our error.

A Night of Furversion

Another subject of interest is “furverts”–”individuals who engage in sexual activity while dressed in animal costumes.”  Review of “Sex and the University,” The Wall Street Journal


Caught in the act

It was Sunday night, and I had to get out of the house.  Another lost weekend in the suburbs.  Drinks and dinner the night before, then our weekly excuse for sex, or what passes for sex after twenty-five years of marriage between a man and a woman who refuses to satisfy her husband’s needs.  She says she meets me halfway.  Once in a blue moon she’ll put on an ermine stole before climbing into bed, but only reluctantly, half-heartedly.  I want–no, I need–a woman who’ll go all the way.

“I’m going out,” I say, and I pretend to ignore her simpering reply “You won’t be late, will you?”  I’m too agitated to palaver with her and I don’t want to waste time concocting excuses.  I need to get to the Combat Zone, before all my favorite animals are taken.


“She’s nice, but where are the fisher cats?”

I pull off the MassPike and cruise through Chinatown until I reach Boston’s world-famous red light district.  A woman tottering on spike heels in a bear suit approaches my car, and I roll down the window.

“You looking for a little ‘wildlife’ tonight?” she says, speaking in code so that the vice squad will have a harder time making a charge of solicitation stick.

“What are you, a grizzly?” I ask, playing along while my car is stopped at a light.

“Take me baby, I ain’t no endangered species.”

I look her over.  Nice, but not exactly Sierra Club calendar material.  “Sorry, baby.  I’m into polar bears or nothing at all.”


Fisher cat:  “Oh yeah–do it baby!”

“Suit yourself,” she says without emotion, and moves on to the next suburban john that she spots.

It’s been a tough week, and frankly, I’m looking for the rough stuff tonight.  Mink?  No, methinks.  Foxfur?  Not fur me.  Chinchilla?  Not much of a thrilla.

What I have in mind is something really wild.  A marmot, perhaps, or even a . . .


Marmot:  “You lookin’ for some action, baby?”

I catch myself.  I can’t believe I’m even thinking about . . . getting it on with a fisher cat!

Yes, the solitary, crepuscular mammal known to Native Americans as the pekan, pequam or wejack, which closely resembles a European polecat.  A fierce and undiscriminating predator, an agile climber.  The word “fisher” doesn’t refer to their diet. It’s a French corruption–fitchet–of the Dutch word visse which means–”nasty.”  That’s what I need to satisfy the hunger within me!

I turn down Washington Street and–there she is!  She’s young–fisher cats reach sexual maturity in just one year–and tawdry, her pelt mottled from the summer heat.  Just the way I like ‘em!  She spots the World Wildlife Fund sticker in my rear window and is on me like a fruit fly on a canteloupe rind.

“Hey baby,” she says as I roll down my window.  “You lookin’ for a real animal?”

The hairs on the back of my neck are standing on end, I want her so badly.  “Yes,” I say.  “How much?”

“Depends.  What you looking for?”

I know I look like a mild-mannered guy, but deep within me lies the soul of a porcupine.  Fisher cats are one of the few predators that will attack a porcupine–that’s what I want.

“I want you to flip me on my back and scoop out my belly like a ripe melon, the way you do with porcupines,” I say.

She bristles.  “I may be a whore, but I’m not sick,” she says with visible disgust.

“Oh please,” I say, rolling my eyes.  “You’ve got a lot of nerve, strutting your stuff on the streets, then getting all self-righteous with me.”

She is angry now.  “Look, you weasel . . .”

“Coming from a polecat, that’s a compliment.”

“Fisher cats have been featured in at least four works of fiction, including The Blood Jaguar by Michael Payne and Winter of the Fisher by Cameron Langford.  There’s even a children’s book–Ereth’s Birthday–about a fisher named Marty.”

 ”Give . . . me . . . a . . . break!”

“It’s by Avi, who won the freaking Newbery Medal!”

Just my luck.  Some guys pick up a whore with a heart of gold.  I have to pick one who’s hung up on literary prizes.

“All right, then.  How much for the usual?”

“I just bite you repeatedly in the face?  Fifty bucks.  And you got to wear a dental dam.”

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Theme: Esquire by Matthew Buchanan.

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