P. Lansky & Son put your car to rest By BILL LAVELY INDUSTRY, especially the automobile industry, has given us a lot of things to be thankful for. One of these things is junk. Foreign countries. do not have junk. It takes an advanced tech- nology to produce it. Europeans still drink beer in bottles because cans have not yet made the scene. Europeans do, in fact, drive cars, but their cars last longer than three years, and somehow they disappear without a trace. IN AMERICA, the waste that accompanies affluency is flaunted proudly before the citizens of the nation. In rural America, a cinder- block house would not be complete without a pair of rusting Buicks or Oldsmobiles. In a certain sub-culture of Monroe Co. Michigan, the number of such "jalopies" in a person's yard is a measure of his social standing. But in the city, junk is collected in large yards for storage and redistribution. These "junkyards" have recently attracted artists who recognize that each twisted piece of junk metal carries with it the expression of an age, and the hopes and ambitions of the individuals who made and used it. THAT '59 FORD that went twice to San Francisco and finally smashed into a telephone pole on Gratiot Ave. ends up someplace. It goes to a scrap metal dealer. All the valuable guages and stuff are stripped off of it, and the remains are left in a pile with a million or more other hulking metal shells. What happens after that is uncertain. SCRAP METAL DEALERS go to work each day. Trucks full of metal arrive and depart from the junk yards, and it has been suggested that profit canbe made in the collection and resale of such metals. But at each sale, the "salvagable" portion of a piece of junk grad- ually diminishes until there is nothing left except "unusable" metal, The unusable part of an old automobile, for example, is about the size of an automobile. So the metal that came from some mountain in Minnesota, pro- cessed in Detroit, sold in Fargo, driven in California, and totaled on Gratiot, comes to its final resting place in a junk yard. Here it is en- shrined forever, a constant reminder to the passing motorist of the greatness of industry and the ephemeral quality of man's works. ANN ARBOR'S JUNKYARDS, admittedly modest by comparison to those of Cleveland and Gary, are nonetheless charming in a small way, An excellent example is the yard called "P. LANSKY AND SON," which is well known to those who enter the Research Center of the midwest from the north. From Main Street, the Lansky yard is sheltered by a concrete wall with the famous P. Lansky name in letters six feet tall. Located on the Huron River across from the canoe livery, the yard has long been discussed by the residents who observe tit from their pleasant homes across the river. For the black children who live down on Depot Street and Summit, and have no opportunity to visit the Main Street establishment, Lan- sky provides a small branch office in that area. This smaller yard is particularly needed now since the demolition of the two slaughter hous- es that flanked the playground there have considerably diminished the old atmosphere. The loss of the yard there would mean the end of a picturesque neighborhood. But there seems little danger of that. Junkyards are nearly in- destructable. They don't burn and, like cemeteries, they are seldom sold. if4e 3tiriin aij Seventy-eight years of editorial freedom Edited and managed by students of the University of Michigan under authority of Board in Control of Student Publications 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich. News Phone: 764-0552 0 Editoriais printed in the Michigan Doily exo ress the 'ndividual opinions of stoff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1968 NIGHT EDITOR: RON LANDSMAN Oni the seventh day., they d 'e it Daily-Peter Dreyfuss In which the popcorn burns and the faucet turns itself on SOMEWHERE BETWEEN our first ride on a ferris wheel and our first multi- ple-choice final exam we stopped looking for castles. It h a d become increasingly difficult over the years to go on believing that we could find a castle. We would climb to the top of a hill and see one in the distance; but we always tore our legs on the jagged edges of our weekly allowances as we ran down the hill to end up in a vale without the castle. We remembered that our castle was to be a haven where we c o u 1 d be excited about life as it is. But when our zeal wax- ed cooler and cooler we felt fortunate just to be satisfied with the life wQ could find in the cat-tracks of a bulldozer which had paved the way for our pre-fab hous- es. After all, if we couldn't know the joy of friendship we could get the satisfac- tion of b e i ng envied. If we didn't get knowledge f r o m our classes we could still take home all-A report cards to our parents. THESE WERE things that could be done right away without the foolishness of searching for castles in dreams that might never be. We rationalized. Living the present spontaneously, we said was a valid and happy expression of ourselves. But we, of course, w er e not living spontaneously. And the present seemed to be part of the past. And the future seemed far away ... .. so far that we tried to build a castle. But we had trouble finding an architect to draw the right blueprints. A castle was to be the perfect haven for us, not for some design-conscious architect who talked about geometric proportions. Anyway an aesthetically correct castle couldn't work because our castle would have to be perfect for us with all of our imperfections, not in spite of them. We tempered our disappointment with second-guesses. Castles, we said, might have dragons hiding in the dark cellars. Castles might echo memories of student government elections or dates with that blonde whose father ,was executive vice- president of U.S. Steel. B UT WE COULD taste our own tears, We f e 1 t as helpless and hopeless as those who walk up and down the banks of a river waiting for the water to freeze so they can cross over; but knowing that when winter does come their muscles will tighten with the cold so that they won't be able to move. Praying and fearing for the first frost. Today the wind blew so gently that we hardly noticed the lightning streaks of ice forming in the. water, But it seems certain that soon the river will be froz- en. So if you have nothing to do that has to be done right away and if you have someone who doesn't need to be asked to go for a walk, some say that you will find a castle as you cross over. -THE EDITORIAL DIRECTORS By MARGARET WARNER SUNDAY NIGHT in Detroit. Mike and MaryAnn and I are sitting on the orange-covered mattress in the living room feeling pretty high. MaryAnn starts walking up the stairs. I say "Watch out for the plumbing." I wonder if I should have been more explicit. MaryAnn yells "Hell" from upstairs. Damn. I run get the mop. I don't feel like running at all. There I am mopping up the water on the floor around the toilet with the dirty mop. f THE WATER in the faucet turns on by itself. (It does that sometimes.) I get the four foot board and balance it on top of the faucet to turn it off. When I go down MaryAnn is making popcorn in the kitchen. Water is still dripping through the ceiling from the bathroom. Oh well. She had too much popcorn in the pan and it keeps pop- ping over the top. I'm feeling high again. Pop, pop, drip pop, drip.. Popcorn all over the wet floor. Pop, pop, drip, pop. Some of the popcorn on the stove catches fire. There it is-the fire and the flood and there is nothing much you can do about either of them. The wet -floor feels funny under my bare feet. I wonder if the linoleum is going to buckle up any more. We laugh alot, but I feel tired too. I am sitting on a wood chair backed up against the stove to keep it shut while the dinner is cooking. One of the' boys on our block is making jello for us for dinner. "NO, WE'RE NOT hippies." He's about the seventh kid who's asked. "But, you're studying to be hippies, aren't you?" I don't say anything. "Why are you sitting by the stove?" He'd be about in seventh grade, except he says he hit somebody so he hasn't been going to school for a year. "To keep the stove shut. It's the only chair I can sit on." "I know. Hippies don't have furniture." Its more than the furniture. We get up late in the morning and we, paint pictures and take photographs. Boys cook dinner. Every day there seems to be a different group of people living there. I try again. "You don't study to be hippies. We're in Detroit because we go to the University of Michigan and we're studying things in the city. ' I don't think he believes me. I don't look at all like a hippie, But why should I care? "That's a hippie design isn't it?" MY PAINTING of a red and green sun with flames curling out to the edge of the paper is over the boarded up fireplace, "Yeah, it looks sort of like a hippie design," I admit. I was sitting in the kitchen looking at the cracks in the ceiling and wondering when it would cave in. A friend of mine says a lot of poor people think like hippies. She's right. If you take life seriously where we are in Detroit, you use up all of your life keeping ahead of the decay around you. A lot of people do that. The hardware stores are jammed with people buying washers for their faucets and home plastering kits to patch up their' failing post-Victorian houses. About one house in five is being painted a bright color by a fifty year old man. But the porch is still caving on the house next door. The man back of us works fifty or sixty hours a week in a factory. He's young and he has two little girls and wants a Cadillac before Christmas. He'll probably get it. It has something to do with self respect. But, for that self respect, he loses all the min- utes and hours of his life. And a lot people aren't willing to give their lives to the factory. MY FRIEND the Mexican social worker has given up on them. He says Americans have no dis- cipline, no morals, no respect. Men work in the winter when it gets cold, but they don't even look for jobs in the summer. They just smoke grass and stand, on corners and watch what's going on around them. The crack in our kitchen ceiling has gotten bigger since all- the water dripped through it. Arid the linoleum is buckling up. But I think I wouldn't do what my neighbor is doing for fifty hours a week. Not for a Cadillac, anyway. I wouldn't be able to paint. 4 -Daily-Jay Cassidy v Obituary: The ethos of an era at 1509 South U By DICK WINTER T HAD BEEN just a turn-of-the-century, bannister-porched house at 1509 South Uni- versity A Most of its life it had housed average, straightforward people-first a family, then two families split into upstairs and downstairs, and then a rush of students coming and going between classes. Nobody knows just about how old 1509 was when it died in a blaze of glory a few weeks ago. But its last era was certainly its most brilliant. The course of its final three years of exist- ence was set in the summer of 1965 when Jeff Goodman, then editorial director of The Daily, discovered 1509. He rounded up several other Daily staffers to occupy it with him for the next year. From that time the frame building with the peeling grey paint saw more excitement and diversity than any place else on campus. PHYSICALLY, 1509 was not terribly different from other Ann Arbor student slum housing. The back porch had rotted to splinters. The basement was a veritable junkyard. It seemed as though anybody who has been, is, or will be on The Daily staff had something "stored" down there: beds, motorcycles, candles, pots and pans television sets, and, yes a kitchen sink. (Looters take note: it's almost all still there.) The dining room table was supported by two a ff_ n strn 2a , .talrk f nwcnn The closet in the living room went un- noticed for over two years before someone discovered it hiding a Michigan Union jacket and a dead bird. The hole in the roof over one of the bed- rooms was the door way for homeless squirrels who once paid a visit in-the middle of the night, landing gracefully on top of the resident and his girlfriend. The flat roof over the rear of the house served as a dining room, picnic grounds, a party room, a junkyard, a bathing ,beach, and a bed- room. BUT THE PHYSICAL qualities of the house paled beside- the lifestyles of its residents. There was a whole year when everyone thought the phones were tapped; the paranoia aroused by mysterious "little clicking sounds" in the phone following the appearance of editor- ials in The Daily written by 1509 residents ad- vocating the legalization of marijuana. And then there was the time when a man thought his runaway daughter, Barbara, was hiding in 1509. He and several cops came busting in one night, finding to everyone's embarrass- ment that there was indeed a Barbara there, but definitely not the one he was looking for. NOW THE GHOST of 1509 stands bleak and forlorn on South University. Scorch marks show where the flames shot from the window of one room, the remnants of sun day morning,__________ A W THE RON JOHNSON?' The desk talkied back ta By MARCIA ABRAMSON BOREDOM. Sitting in class stultified. No- where to turn. Colleges are like old folks homes, you con- clude, but more people die in colleges. You stare at the desk in front of you. And it talks back. "L'amertume mon cher n'a jamais accompli grand chose." Desk grafitti. Communication of the con- demned: "Ron Johnson." "Ron." "Johnson." A query: "THE Ron Johnson?" "Yes." "Really?" "No, I just write his name a lot." "Ron Johnson?" "Ron Johnson. Moo-U." "What time are you here?" : ,