Pixie dust sugarplum By CARLA RAPOPORT ...the world is full of zanies and fools who won't believe in sensible rules and won't believe what sensible people say. "And because these dopes and dewey- eyed dopes keep building up impossible hopes, 'impossible things are happening every day." EVEN SOME ten years removed from the days. when I memorized this line along with every other, in Rogers and Hammerstein's "Cinderella," I am still like it. Even now as I typed the words, I briefly glanced over my shoulder, some- what expecting to see the pink fairy I've been waiting for all this time. And I'm not embarrassed to say that I have my three wishes well planned and organized, waiting for her to grant them. (I guess I read too many stories a b o u t foolish people losing everything to tricky fairies. Anyway, my first wish is 10 more wishes.) But the fairy has never appeared, ig- noring the improvised incantations my 9- year-old self used to repeat nightly. Yet, now, a philosophy major and an atheist, I believe I have my own fairy. I BELIEVE IN HER because I don't have to also believe she created the world, or died for my sins, or would hate me if I didn't live by her rules. And I don't have to go to family reunions on her birthday. She'll always like me, always exist in her non-entity. She'll always be up there be- Showering down freedom: Visions of Justin Thyme By LARRY LEMPERT THE MUSIC came on at 10:15 and Justin Thyme woke up, slowly. He rolled away from the radio and opened his eyes. Outside - a dim grayness, wet, cold. He rolled back, turn- ed off the radio, shut his eyes. Then he began to remember steam heat. The overwhelming, burning mist, hot sweat, mois- ture dripping off the walls, off the skin of so many living bodies, coating the mirrors. But it was all distant, a dream lost in waking. Another glance out the window made him feel very straight, very normal, very drab. Out of bed and to the bathroom; he got dressed. "I can remember talking quietly with John and Sarah," he thought to himself, "and then a charge of people suddenly exploded the calm. Breathing in deep and going up in the smoke- filled, crowded dormitory room. Lots of laugh- ing people and a striking girl, with wire-rimmed glasses and a serious look of impenetrability on her face (like she knew, but she wasn't going to tell anyone she didn't like, and she didn't like me). "Then hours later the confusion had gone. The people and the girl with wire-rimmed glasses had disappeared, leaving John and Sarah and me alone again in the smoky air." JUSTIN WENT downstairs, put a piece of bread in the toaster and poured some milk over a bowl of cereal. "Noise in the hall drew us out. We saw a cloud of steam three feet thick that hid the ceiling. People ran by, undressed in shorts, bathing .suits or in towels. Then the three of us went back into the room and ripped off our clothes. Wrapped only in towels, we followed the stream of steam down the hall, around the corner and into the bathroom. "It led us into a den of hot, thick moisture. The showers had been run for hours at full heat. We stood there, timid at first. Every- one was soaking themselves in steam and peo- ple; we smiled at each other through run- ning rivers of sweat. "Shyly sharing a new experience, we all sat, walked around slowly, tried to find worts to express feelings. It was exciting and exhiliarat- ing; so simple yet so incredible, so outrageous. "THE TOWEL around my waist served no purpose - I took it off. Someone held out a pitcher of icy water. I dipped my face in the cold, sharp and shocking. Beautiful. I wander- ed into one of the showers that was running cold and let the needles of water pierce my skin all over . .." The toast was burning. Justin took it out, spread some jam on it and munched on the soggy cereal. Weird goddam dream. He had been so unin- hibited. He had felt the joy of being, ac tely aware of the moment. Now it was remote; he even felt slightly embarrassed. Now his body was surrounded by- dry cool air and was clothed again in its inhibitions. MAYBE IT ALL did happen, really, Justin thought. He considered the idea but dismissed it. Even if it happened, it was still a dream. And now he was awake again. -Daily-Gary Villani America seen from a moving junk pile '9 By ROBERT SCHREINER WHEN SOMEONE asks if I had fun in Florida over Spring Break, I say yes. When someone asks if I had a nice trip, I say no. I am very careful to make this dis- tinction. You see, being in Florida was great. Eight straight days without having to open a book or write a single word was a great change of pace. No, being in Florida was fun. It was the getting there, getting around and getting back that was not. Our friends had told us not to go to Florida in a '63 Triumph TR-4 with over 100,000 miles of experience. They warned that with each successive mile, the car would become less of an asset and more of a liability. But we did not heed them. We held tight to the belief that our trusty red convertible would get us there and back. And it almost did. We left Ann Arbor Wednesday morn- ing, allowing 30 hours to reach our des- tination 1400 miles away. We drove blithely through the night cruising through Dayton and Cincinnati. Kentucky passed without incident, and I remember wishing during one of' those hazy periods between sleep and con- sciousness that our friends who told us the car was not going to make it coulc see us now, purring along the highway, with absolutely no trouble after some ten hours of straight driving. SOME THREE HOURS later, I watched John lower the car to the ground and kick the hubcap into place. It was our third flat tire in 100 miles, and second in the last 20. I began to feel a bit appre- hensive, since our second and last spare was now on the car. And it was 2 a.m. 30 minutes later, John was driving down a dark, two-lane highway bordered on both sides by seemingly endless fields. The car began its telltale sway--we stopped. I only shrugged, and kept shrug- ging while John took the tire off the car and lit a flare. We had no idea how far it was to a gas station. I flipped a coin and we both lost. John b e g a n hitchhiking toward Chattanooga and I prepared for a long wait with the car. After 10 minutes, one car passed us going the other way. The flare fizzled and died. In our direction, about five vehicles - most of them trucks - passed every, few minutes. They don't usually pick up hitchhikers, we found, but rather beep the horn and wave or offer some other gesture, as they go by. I meanwhile harbored the guilty feel- ing that at '3 a.m. in this desolate spot I would not have stopped for John either -and I have known him for six years. BUT FINALLY John got a ride. As he drove away, I remember- wishing I had listened to our friends who had advised us to hitchhike. Three hours later, John came back with the patched tire, and we were off again. South of Atlanta, we stopped at a small gas station, where the attendant diagnosed our tire problem as a bad case of "rim-rub." I nodded my head and kept nodding as we drove away, never to know if he was bluffing or not. We made it all the way through Geor- gia and down Florida's turnpike. Every- thing was fine there, since we could stay at high speeds. The problem, we realized, would come at the toll gate when we got off. I calculated the toll in advance, and it came to $3.80. Our plan called for John to keep reviving the engine, while I would hand the man four one-dollar bills. Things went like clockwork until John lifted his foot off the accelerator to put the change in his pocket. The car coughed and died. BY THE TIME we pushed the car up the slight grade to the side of the road, cars were backed up quite a ways. As people passed us, they kind of squirmed in their seats. A few of them spit out the window. Some came quite close to us. But none of them stopped. That was probably because we were hitchhiking. But at any rate, the car would not start, it was midnight, and we were standed a on a turnpike exit near Boca Raton, Florida. We called someone we knew in Boca Raton, and she told us we could probably find a place to stay at a nearby college. We got directions, and she warned us if we were hitchhiking to watch out for a Spaniard in a white Chevy who "drives around looking for people to kill." We began hitchhiking, but for some reason, every time a car approached, we would pull our thumbs in, and watch it go by. I have never seen so many white an interview with Muhammed Ali, and a number of irate residents of the area (not even a nice place to visit) began ap- proaching us with broken bottles. (I must give the car credit. It started up quick then.) I could tell about how we were 'stopped by the police in Ft. Lauderdale for ex- cessive noise. And in Pompano Beach. And Miami. Or how we left for home on Saturday morning, and drove 600 miles without any problems at all, only to have the lights go out-panel lights, rear lights, head- lights. And how it was midnight. And pouring rain. And big trucks going very fast down the highway. And .how we subsequently pulled into a gas station near Macon, Georgia, where the following exchange took place: "Sir, do you take credit cards here?" "We take them all. What kind you got?" "Gulf." "We don't take that one." OR HOW A STATE policeman walked into the gas station's men's room, looked at us combing our hair, and said loudly, "My god, I better get out of here. I must be in the ladies room." Or how five minutes later, he ticketed us for not having a muffler, even though the car was not running, and despite John's helpful offering that we did in- deed have a muffler-in the trunk. And how, at nine in the morning (after being in the same gas station for ten hours), a guy at the station next door offered John $20 for the car (and he had been offered $200 up here) and how we haggled him to $40 and sold it. But how just as a policeman was drawing up Eighty years of editorial freedom Edited and mdnaged by students at the University of Michigan 420 Maynard St., Ann Arbor, Mich News Phone:, 764-0552 Editorials printed in The Michicon Doily express the individual opinions of staff writers or the editors. This must be noted in all reprints. SUNDAY, MARCH 21, 1971 NIGHT EDITOR: JONATHAN MILLER *i cause, in her nothingness, the mere pos- sibility of her appearance is always pre- sent.tWhen I'm wicked she'll be sad, but understand the motives behind my actions and not chastise me. She'll never chastise me. It's easy to get a fairy.- I guess I knew my fairy was here to stay when I wrote a story in the Daily saying registration would be only today and tomorrow when in fact it was lasting for two weeks, and due to my story thousands of people were jamming into a little room in the LSA building and secretaries and Daily editors and students in line were cursing and swearing at one incompetent: me. But a feeling within me could only laugh and laugh in a mischevious sort of way, teasing my depressed self into seeing how important the mistake really was. And from then on all my mistakes have been important. (In fact as time goes on, my mistakes have grown more and more im- portant.) A SLY WINK, a mischevious tug, a pinch or a peal of laughter, these are the ways of my fairy. She humors me without asking me what's wrong, she likes me without any reason. And unlike my dog Buster, she'll never get hit by the garbage truck. A lot of times I argue with her when she kicks someone I'm angry with and will be jealous .if I become friendly with them again. Those times, she'll go away and I won't need her until I forget my midterm was on Tuesday and it's Thursday. WHILE ONE CLOCK counts in frenzied subtraction of minutes from the in- evitable doom of the environment, and another measures in a jittery glare the days before Graduation and thousands of watches guage with a kindly glance back- ward, we can only pause and ponder the charging click on our own wrists, curious where we are. Because one moment an eye to the wrist means flurries of the present; it is 10 o'clock and our moments are haunted by papers and tests and that steamroller, work. And then we lean back, flick the watch aside, and the clock marks dif- ferent: another time, younger perhaps, reliving that innocence, puffing streams of hope and faith. And we shock ourselves back to the place we are sitting-stalled, confused, eternally cynical. We've entered the pres- ent again; but the clock doesn't clatter, with the staccato of professor's voice; it is still, circling unceasingly around a moment. At age five she dreamed to play the actress until time slips forward and the ticktock of fate meets her at 10 p.m. in a placid rendezvous with the shimmer of the part she dreamt at 10 p.m. one Saturday thirty years before. SO NOW SHE creeps into that dusty past, united for an instant - until present's foghorn blurts back; where is she, where has she been-only tracing footsteps. Yes, we all tread a shadow in different shades: a fairy sprinkles pixie dust sugarplum, Justin Thyme's moment melts to nakedness. In the murky hodge- podge of ambivalence a body starves it- self. While a s p o r t s car searches the country as a moving junkpile, thumping hundreds of miles u n t i1 a final jerk, stranded somewhere (like us all uncertain where we are or when we are) stray in that modern bustle: nowhere. -RICK PERLOFF the -Daily-Gary vinlani Chevy's in my life. We finally took a taxi to the college, where we slept a troubled sleep in the lounge of the un- locked(?) administration building. I COULD GO ON for a long time, if I had the space, and tell you about the rest of the trip. About how we finally got the car started two days later (it was the points), and how it had to be push-started (me pushing, John steer- ing) each time we started it for the next week. Or about how the muffler fell off across from the Fifth Street Gym in Miami Beach, where we had gone to get the bills of sale, I went over and turned the key and the car started up. Then I could tell how we put all our stuff back in, threw five dollars on the floor and left to the warning of the attendant that "the next time that junk- pile stops, it will never start again." I, could also tell you that if you were to go down now to the long-term parking lot of the Atlanta airport, you would see a red, '63 Triumph TR-4 convertible still sitting there, running up a bill at the rate of $1.25 per day, which no one is ever going to pay. IT ONLY HURTS when I laugh. 4i sundoty doily By RICK PERLOFF SUFFER, MY CHILD, suffer-you shall not nibble or lick or sniff your way into the stingiest snip of food; no lad, this is a week for fast- ing, for abstention from, instinctual- psychologicaldrive, eating (I'm talk- ing to you, myself); they say that. to eat is a necessity so you must neces- sarily gargle flat splashes of fruit juice, fruit juice I said, in the dankest concealment, and comfort is taboo and we would prefer it if you did not sleep, only suffer. Suffer, my friend, suffer, for this is a fast to stop military and classi- fied research because it is wrong and a tornado of other adjectives which you have not used in the past for you Starving the body, Ah, that is downright romantic be- cause I know, I the Self, and nobody f believes in God anymore, they just } construct a superstructure Self which is as majestic and awesome as God has ever been. Yes you who had never fasted before can ring up an- other experience and you slurp your fruit juice because then you will be on the wagon to Strength and Power, your own virtues in an age when you have enough, but others do not. So I would like to know just why you do this, for the shelter of yourself or our of concern for others, and please I know the adjectives to describe their plight in Vietnam; which is it, fellow? "I DO NOT know, Self. I wish I could answer. I have no swirling tun- feeding the soul child. You are neither Job nor Mac- Leish, my boy, and I decree guilt, suffer, and you must ask no more.'' AND SO HE FASTED for seven days and seven nights, not quite sure why but petrified when he once touched a slice of cheese, fearful that the wrath of Self would hurl down; plodding through the dark of fright, terrified that at any moment he might snatch a crumb, commit blasphemy in a restaurant and never would be saved. He huddled, he stumbled through the seven days and worried that the ice he ate on Wednesday was per- haps solid, not liquid, and wrong, that the coffee he twice swallowed included } f' solid chunks, before mixed, and even suffered, now at last the Self would save his soul. But in the end it did not matter, his sprinkles of romance in a teeming age of filth. In the end, the Self did not tell him (had he won or lost?) and the child brushed his teeth and washed his hands, so guilty and confused at the outcome. Because during the seven nights and seven days, when he had hoped to suffer alone at night, pray- ing that he would crave comfort, yearn for swarms of globs of food, he had clawed for nothing and found the effort barely tantalizing. Oh, he had 'lost some weight, of course, a little hungrier than before, but it had been no callous fate, no torrid hell, it was just a nuisance to abstain a week, a bit monotonous to f