(Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Saturday, September 16, 1972 1 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY There's a right way.. . CANYON: THE STORY OF THE LAST RUSTIC COMMUN- ITY IN METROPOLITAN AMERICA, John van der Zee. Ballantine Books, $1.25. By ED SUROVELL Daily Books Editor Geography and quirks of hu- man behavior produce strange towns on occasion-boom towns in inaccessible places and the like-but near Berkeley they combined to create a tiny rural enclave on the edge of the great California sprawl. Canyon, and many similar villages, were set- tled in the 1850s, as an offspring of lumbering operations which depleted the great coastal red- wood forests. The forests gone, the towns either died or as in Canyon's case limped along, changing character with the times, now a small resort, now something else. By the early 1950s Canyon had been reduced to a cluster of 'perhaps a hundred ,summer homes converted mostly to year- around use,'with poor sanitation, limited water, and no public transportation in or out. The surrounding lands were owned by the East Bay Utilities Dis- trict (MUD), upon whose reser- voir watershed Canyon unhap- pily sat. MUD had decided that the village posed a threat to the purity of the reservoir and started buying all property that went up for sale in the town. Consequently, the little village which had existed obstinately for a century began to die quiet- ly but quickly as MUD spent half a million dollars to buy and demolish half of Canyon's house,. During the 1950s and '60s how- ever Canyon became the refuge for many of Berkeley's less con- ventional types, not all of whom were freaks by the usual stand- ards - there were academics, some professionals and a scat- tering of dropouts, political ac- tivists and others. The new- comers began experimenting with architecture, partly out of inclination, partly because build- ing permits could not be had from the county because of the lack of sewerage, partly because conventional loans were not available from the banks who wanted the insurance that was unavailable because of the lack of water. As the community grew with salvaged materials, uncertain land titles, no building permits, and the freer living ar- rangements so unpopular with county officials and the water company, open war was declar- ed on Canyon, and most of the new houses were condemned. John van der Zee has done a thorough and fascinating job of telling the story of the fight of the town to preserve its exist- ence, and of the growth of the sense of community within Can- yon. Canyon is a successful strike against some of the most restrictive aspects of American life - the official requirements that the environment be de- stroyed to build and the iron- clad association of big business and government - and its tale is well worth reading. b 0 0 k s WOODSTOCK Modern Lng. Aud. 7$ c830-10:00 $1.25 cant. 4 I Subversive architecture from Canyon. ... and a wrong way FIREPLACE AND Nicholas Johnson, TEST PAT- TERN FOR LIVING. Bantam, $1.25. A bitter voice from the dead BLOOD IN MY EYE, George Jackson, Bantam, $1.50. By MERYL GORDON "Born to a premature death, a menial, subsistence - wage worker, odd-job man, the clean- er, the caught, the man under hatches, without bail - that's me, the colonial victim. Anyone who can pass the civil service examination today can kill me tomorrow. Anyone who passed the civil service examination yesterday can kill me today with complete immunity. I've lived with repression every moment of my life, a repression so for- midable, that any movement on my part can only bring relief, the respite of a small victory, or the release of death." George Jackson's Blood in My .Eye is a frightening book. De- livered to a publisher a few days before he was shot and killed, during an alleged escape at- tempt from San Quentin Prison, the book reveals Jackson's per- ception and expectation of death. "In the early service of the people there must be totally committed, professional revolu- tionaries who understand that all human life is meaniingless if it is not accompanied by the con- trols that determine its quality. I am one of these. My life has absolutely no value." Jackson's book details his vi- sion as a revolutionary. He has taken his rage at society, at the world that imprisoned him for 11 years, and turned it into a cool controlled weapon. His an- ger now becomes his plan to change society, his revolutionary dream. Regretably, some passages in the book are pure rhetoric. But Today's writer . . Meryl Gordon, a Daily regu- lar, is a regular reviewer on this page and a friend in need. ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE needs Set De- signers for the 1972-73 Season. If you are inter- ested in designing one of t h e following, Anthing Goes, The Lion In Winter, Thieves' Ca rn i valI or Prime Of Miss Jean Bro- die, call Alice Crawford - afternoons, 769-0005, eves. 663-8864. Nicholas Johnson, the Federal Communications Commissioner who is one of the few tolerable bureaucrats around, has written a kind of middle class guide to alternative life styles that is neither original nor is it par- ticularly challenging to many people of good intentions, but that might, I suppose, make them feel better about doing their part to fight the corporate state. "Ask yourself," he asks, "how many people you know whom you think of as fully functioning per- sonalities. How many are there in whose daily lives there is a measure of beauty, contact with nature, artistic creativity, philo- sophical contemplation or reli- gion, love, self-fulfilling produc- tivity," and so on? He is right in a way, of course, but he doesn't offer very much in the way of an answer. Bicycles are better than cars, he observes. And baking soda does a better job than tooth paste, and cheaper. And potato chips, soda pop, and foods with processed sugar are bad for you. Do you really need that electric toothbrush or electric carving knife? The trouble is that we al- ready know this, and his advice is spread so thin that it becomes dull reading. The old ways show through in places, in spite of his good in- tentions. Looking at housework, for example: Once a husband and wife be- gin to share a common apprecia- tion of the physical, psychologi- cal, and spiritual values of par- ticipating in their own life-sup- port activities, they have entered into a new dimension of their lives. . . . A husband who keeps the garage in a semblance of order can recognize a tidy kitch- en when he sees one. . . . If a man has tended the garden, he can appreciate the jars of fruits and vegetables canned by his wife. Man's work for the man, wo- man's for the woman. We need more. Johnson has done a great deal of good-inasmuch as this is pos- sible given the state of the medium-for America's TV life, and he has some interesting things to say about the tube here. But the book just doesn't make it: "A Twentieth-Century Guide to Coping with Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness-With- out, Dropping Out" the publish- ers have spread across the front cover. "How to talk back to your corporate state." Well, maybe. -E.S. e: 2 bedroom Off-street parking Dishw$asher HOSPITAL LOCATION WOODSTOCK Modern Lang. Aud. 7:00-8:30-10:00 $1.25 cont. Friends of Newsreel * Air-conditioning ® Laundry facilities 0 Balcony LARCHMONT ppartments 665-8825 Amp- r ---- r others reveal Jackson's emotion- al responses to his world. He speaks lovingly of his brother Jonathan, killed in an attempt to free George. Jackson talks with calm fury of the indignities he's undergone throughout his life. "I've been arrested, interro- gated, or investigated more times than I care to count. I've learned ten times more about the process than the most ex- pert single groups of inquisitors. From the first moment I'm brought into this scenario, I at- tempt to establish control over the exchanges that will take place between myself and my captors. Depending on the situ- ation, one learns to feign either indignation, surprise, idiocy, or fear . . . I don't think I am an exception at all, as most blacks learn by 'age fifteen how to han- dle the cretins who hire out as guns for the privileged." The impact of Jackson's words is strong. Jackson disciplined himself throughout his many years in prison, and developed a powerful voice to describe his view of America to come. 5 j , 4 X7 i e " f y ' a r ~ ." . ' . rW. MASS MEETING for Homecoming 1972 IRose Were The Days OCTOBER 25-29 WORK ON ONE OF THESE COMMITTEES PUBLICITY ALUMNI RELATIONS SPECIAL EVENTS THEME GRAPHICS COME TO THE MEETING-TUES., SEPT. 19 7:-30 p.m. UAC Offices--2nd Floor---Union r / f '. i . / / i i '. . t. t< 1 E.1 xV A r I