Thursday, September 9, 1076 . THE MICH1CAN't)AILY Page Eleven Thu rsdoy, September 9, 1976 THE MICHIGAN DAILY ~oge Eleven HISTORY OF THE BL UES (Continued from Page 5) Well, like everybody else, we were up for a morning fuck.I And this round I'll skip most of my Curt Gowdy commentary. It happens just like before ex- cept this time everybody works out OK. The secret formula is I got to remember to survive her or- gasm by not thinking too much. Then when she's done, I shoot off. It works. After that Martha's had enough fucking for a while and wants to get up and go over to Steve's lunch and grab some- thing to eat. That's fine with me. So it's out the door and over to Steve's lunch. It's past noon already. ** * A LOT OF TIMES Martha wants me to go out drinking with her friends. Her friends are mostly 25 and all paired up as to boyfriend and girlfriend. And me, the newcomer, Mar- tha's latest boyfriend. So there I am with all these paired - off w i 1 d celebrators. Martha's digging on them. When I'm with her in a crowd I don't feel like it's fair. It's not one-on-one anymore. But this is her family, and I can't take it away from her. I got my family in Cleveland, and she's got her family in Ann Arbor. Some people work it that way. They go off to college and form a tight-knit group of friends. They forget about back home, and from then on in they got a new family. They buy anniver- sary gifts for each other, even though nobody's married. We all go over to the Del Rio and settle on bottles of Rolling Rock They're playing a tape of Dr. Ross, an old black har- monica man. I reviewed him for the Daily once and called him lousy but I was wrong. He's greatt He plays train-like har- monica sounds. Nobody wants to listen to him though. The principal reason for having cometo the Del Rio was for us to get drunk, Finally we split. And this time it's over to the Pretzel Bell-what used to be a jocky bar but has lately cap- tured the freak crowd away from Mr. Flood's Party, pri- marily because they got a funky country-western band. Country Rock:I guess., Hillbilly singers, U. of M. dropouts. Martha loves "Stand by your man," and her friend Henry kids her about "Which man? Frank or Bert?" I, just like everybody else, am fully aware that she's still see- ing her ex-boyfriend Frank, in what she calls a "friendly fuck- ing relationship." I rationalize it. I figure it gives me a little leeway if I ever decide to shaft her. And even though we sit drunk as hell in the Pretzel Bell, I know that come Spring things won't be mellow between Mar- tha and me. * * * JUST LIKE THIS. You have a day in late February and it's cold out. Not to belabor cold weather, but just for the sake of telling it like it is, I got to ex- plain that Ann Arbor cold is a different thing than, say, Cleve- land cold. Cleveland gets plenty of snow, but snow's irrelevant, to cold. Or take Buffalo, they get more snow than anybody in' the world, but it's not freezing. And even way up in Michigan in the Upper Penninsula, they get tons of snow but it's not freezing the way it is in Ann Arbor. Because in Ann Arbor you also have the University of Chicago effect working against you. I coined this effect a couple years ago when I was walking around the campus there and noticed that the whole place was solid gray. This happens in Ann Arbor too in the winter. You don't get any variation on the gray, and if you do it's most likely going to be blue or brown. Blue jeans, brown boots. And can you picture a young black student cutting across the U. of M. campus? He's got on his long underwearbbut he's still freezing. A black man s o m e h o w misplaced in this Arctic nation, thinking, "You white dudes are made for this shit, but not my black ass!" So you pity him and everybody else, and you sit back and dig on the Northern girls who final- ly get a little color in their faces. Normally they're creamy white. Martha's like that. I love to see her in the cold. She looks right when it's freezing. The good part of this weather is that it sometimes ends, but that doesn't happen till April, and that's great! Nothing like Spring in Ann Arbor. For now take late February. The Ann Arbor Bank sign says 10 de- grees. I got one scarf around my neck and I got my hat pull- ed way over my head and I'm walking over to Martha's. She's saved me from the winter. I've made a friend. But with girls and me it's never really friends. With Mar- tha it's got to be more than that, though we're pretty sure we're not in love, because for she's got visions of Mr. Frank walking in on us and seeing me. That's too much to deal with. And what about when she fucks? She doesn't know who's on top half the time. From my standpoint I don't dig the triangular love either, but what am I going to do? She's got enough problems with- out me. I tell her maybe she should get married to Frank and things would work out. But that's no go, because Frank's a drunken weed man who watches TV all day and Martha's twice as smart as him. That's what she's saying. But she still wants to make up with him. So what's love? and can you love two peo- ple? - all questions which she might be considering. 'S0 TRY THIS, skipping over a million now-forgotten similar incidents: A typical Saturday afternoon in Michigan in late February-early March. We're in her room going through the records again, listening to Ringo Starr. And she's saying, "You wanna play gin rummy?" "No thanks," I say. "I hate it." For some reason I hate all card games. "How about chess?" "No thanks." I hate chess too. "You wanna lie around all day?" "We can go out and look at the used records." "No thanks." aren't any leg-watchers any- more, obviously. So you sit by with a couple dark-eyed b o y s from Latin America and listen to them say, "Caramba!" They come from miles around. And there are older men out looking too. They can't believe it when they see a pack of nine freshman girls, all in tight-fitting blue jeans, all long hair hung straight and "Yeah, it's good, but we gotta be alike in some things." "Well, we are," she says. And that's true. We're both in- dependent sorts, but that's noth- ing to have in common. Or may- be it's just my hangup; I keep thinking I'm going to find a girl who's the exact female counterpart of me. In fact I want her to look just like me and play harp too. It's stupid. "But with girls and me it's never really friends. With Martha it's got to be more than that, though we're pretty sure we' re not in love, because for one reason, if you're in love you're supposed to be so starry eyed and breathless you can't even decipher whether you're in love or not." ..am.y.} ..:M.{< :,;":{ ... ?. . ;v,.}ip;:..+ {" :,".. 4r"!."""i:iiG:.::. ""4v i:}:. . . . . .. :.:.........o:v.f:""";.v,..":?:"ht :. :.. .' :" life. I want to know if I oughta get out." But that's not what I'm really driving at. What I really want to know is, "Are we doing any- thing more than fuck these days?" Our only good times are in bed. I say to Martha, "Why do I like you, huh?" "I don't know," she smiles. "Well, I don't either. Let's see, you're good-looking (she laughs). You're kind. You're concerned . . . Oh fuck!" I give up. She's getting the picture. "Is there anything I can do?" "I don't know." (I say "I don't know" every other sen- tence.) Once more: "I don't know." And I realize I got to change the subject. I'm freaking her out too much with my downer talk-her coming in so high and all. And I know I can jump right out of it in a second. All I got to do is take a step back, look at the situation, think of people starving and really bad off, and start laughing. I do that. I get up and say, "Don't worry. I'm OK." She wonders even more now. "Let's talk a b o u t Spring Break," I say. So then she tells me she's going to New York to visit a friend and then to Boston to visit another friend. "Oh really? You're going?" I say. I'd had the idea we'd be out on the road together, may- be heading for Boston. She realizes that- and adds, "Well, we can meet up in Bos- ton and then travel around to- gether." But I don't really want to go all the way to Boston without her. I figure it'd be easier to go home again and talk to my family in the family room. Get out of Ann Arbor. "OK," I say. "You go up to Boston and New York. That sounds good. Maybe you can' get me a copy of 'The World' in New York." She says she'll do that and says good-bye, and I watch her walk away. I walk over to the rideboard. I've got to go somewhere. May- be to Cleveland. Nobody's left in town. Everybody has headed out to Colorado or chartered themselves off to the Bahamas. I've got to do some serious looking amongst the signs or I won't find a ride and then I'll be stuck with the bus. I walk out with a couple old cards in my hand. I get back, make my call, and hit on my first one-a girl who's going to Cleveland Heights. And she's leaving the next day. All I want to do is get home and find my parents and eat. I've been raised on school calendars for so long that I don't know what it's like not to be in school. I'm more a Ph.D. candidate than a dropout. I measure my life in summers. It's always summers. So here I am going home for a vacation -alone-and I'm not even en- rolled. t s one reason if you're in love you're supposed to be so starry- eyed and breathless you can't even decipher whether you're in love or not, you just know, and if you're busy thinking about it you got problems. Martha was busy thinking about it. She differentiated be- tween "loving somebody" and being "in love with somebody.", She said she loved me, but that she also loved about ten other people. She said she wasn't in love with me. Anyway, I go over to Martha's for spaghetti. This spaghetti business is serious. It's the only think she cooks. Well, some- times she bakes bread, but noth- ing else. Reason being, her old- er sister had always done the cooking back home and Mar- tha'd never gotten too interest- ed in taking over the job. After dinner we get out the records and lie in bed. While we're lying there, Martha says, "What're you thinking?" And I'm not really thinking anything special at all, just smiling and enjoying myself. * * * HERE ARE secret dreams in Martha's head I don't know a thing about. Like, how's she supposed to relax? Maybe! That's a solo trip-for me. It's part of my old routine from the days when I'd been alone and had dug cruising about town looking in the record stores and the bookstores. I don't want to do that with her. And besides I know she's not interested. "Let's just lie here a while, longer and then I'll go," I say. "I have to go back and type up some stuff." At times like this she's prob- ably thinking, "Maybe I'd be better off with Frank, because everything eventually turns into another Frank-just sit around." . She's got the added problem that everybody around her is getting married, and she isn't. Every other day she's bom- barded with wedding invitations in the mail, and then she trucks off to bridal showers for long forgotten childhood girlfriends. She laughs about it. She says, "God, you shoulda seen this wedding I was at yesterday! I'll never get married!" And she's got the problem that having two boyfriends at once is making her looked con- fused-in her own mind and her friends' minds. She's always be- ing -kidded about it. And, God, what if Frank and I did meet? * * * . ANN ARBOR IS great in the Springtime because of all those thin, cotton blue jeans that fit perfectly around girl's hips and are lassoed with wide leather belts. You sit on the Diag and dig the asses as they scoot by on bicycles. There's no time for tits. Passe. It's all in the ass and crotch now, because all the curves in the bell-bottoms lead right to that V. And there silky, go heading up the Hill. It's all blue in Ann Arbor, but in Spring you don't mind, be- cause people go crazy when it's sunny; blue grass bands play on the Diag, guitarists too . . . flutists. It's all great. And it's all so young you wonder if any- body has any idea they're going to die someday. A couple pro- fessors and Pakistani engineers go walking by. These guys have no idea they're going to die either, and they're 50! So you got to excuse the 18-year-old girls for just digging on Cat Stevens and forgetting the sad- ness. The girls are killer, and they know it, and they walk like they know it. I don't mean conceited and stuck-upish in a junior high sense; I'm talking about plain, sexy walking. Creased asses all over. But, on the o t h e r hand, throughout every corner of Ann Arbor, there are a million other Marthas. Those same Michi- ganese faces: clear, pale skin and gray or blue-gray eyes. A million Marthas sitting in their rooms, thinking up who to send anniversary cards too, who to buy birthday presents for. They're all caught up in their friendy, and they love them. Gifts and good times. * * * IN THE BEGINNING of a romance you can sit around and play "Nashville Skyline" all day and love it. But then a few weeks later you get to thinking the album is kind of boring, and it just doesn't work anymore. And that's when you start picking up the Stones and the heavier stuff. Because who wants to listen to Dylan singing his love songs, when it really isn't like that? I only play "Nashville Sky- line" when I've just met a girl; when I'm singing and smiling at myself in the mirror every morning when I get up. Now it's time for something else. One night on the way home from a party I say to Martha,' "You know, we really are dif- ferent!" "That's good." So Martha doesn't like Jack Kerouac. She doesn't read. OK,l but she is friendly. Everybody'sl friendly. Go have a fucking friendly relationship. * ** KEEP THINKING Martha and I are.going to bump into Frank so in order not to make things easier on him, we move our sex habits over to my house. I don't want to stay down at her place locker door no no locked door. And it becomes stale. Gray day. A long fadeaway jumper. It could score three .points in the old ABA-Connie Hawkins and the Pittsburgh Wrens. Well, Connie'd gotten a raw deal. And so had we. I keep imag- ining everybody in my rooming house has his ear to the wall and is listening to us fuck- listening to Martha's yelping and kicking. So you gotta take the kick out of argasm? What fun's that? It's pretty bad. One night when Martha's not around, I decide , I got to see her so I call her and she says, "Come on down." "No," I say. I hear sounds of marijuana happening down there. I want serious talk. I add, "How about coming up to the Union?" (That's halfway between her place and mine). She agrees and I head over to the Union. She says she'll be right over, but it takes her for- ever. I go over to the magazine stand, buy a Kit-Kat and look through the newspapers. She's twenty -ninutes late. i''have left if I had any- thing to do, but don't forget I'm unemployed and d o in g shmatz. (That's nothing in Jew- ish, or in the Jewish I picked up from hanging around gang- ster-friend Eddie Miller in my youth.) But then I see her walking in, smiling, stoned out of her ba- zooms. What am I supposed to do? So I act really bummed out, and in a few minutes I bring her right down to my depressing level. She asks me what's w r o n g. I tell her, "Everything's wrong. I'm an in- truder. I got no business in your START OUT THE SEMESTER RIGHT BY LISTENING TO DAILY: MORNING SHOW. NOON SHOW. 0 " 6" 30 am; Peter Greenquist 12-00 n .Fred l HndIev 3 0 s 1:00 p.M. " . I # VU flealmoVi AFTERNOON MUSICALE. BOOKS BY RADIO . . SPORTS REPORT . . MUSIC OF THE MASTERS S..4:30 p.m. . . 4:45 p.m. 8:05 p.m. . . Stephen Skelley . . . Ed Burrows . -Tom Hemingway Evans Mirageas For a FREE PROGRAM GUIDE, call (313) 164-9210 Ii', 'I P if you see news happen call 76-DAILY Michigan Bell Service Bulletin 0 I I.a A it DOES AN Advertising Career interest you7 14e Mftrf$1an Nit l OFFERS YOU THE CHANCE TO: * Work with customers and assisting them in their Students: "Ordel your phones nom Avo iOC the rush late We try pretty hard to make it easy for students to get through to people. For example, we've set up c special system so that you can order your phones before you arrive for the fall term. Yousimply call us collect. Dial (313) 761-9900, and tell us your address, apartment numb{ student I.D. and Social Security Please be sure you make an appointment on a day and at a time when you will be at your apartment. And we'll have your phone connected on time. If you're in town, you may visit our business office at 324 East Huron, anytime between 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. On Saturday, September 1lth, we'll be open from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. for your added convenience. This year we are able to offer you a variety of services with your new phone equipment including Call Waiting, Call Forwarding, 3-Way Calling and Speed Calling, Touch-Tone* Service, Design Line Telephones*, and many more. But don't forget. Order your phone service early and you , s _ Y''t"ef'r -Z - _ '1' gtY ir i CTB