pink and purple polka dots Look, Ma, I'm steering the ferry Crone 7 b anita c x. rp1HERE COMES a time in every writer's existence when you find yourself forced to write something that you wish you had nothing to do with. Instead of about writing was was assigned, you find yourself with an entirely different story that has little to do with the original assignment. Anyway, that's what happened this weekend, and instead of writ- ing a review of the Grateful Dead, the Who, and George Har- rison and Ravi Shankar, I'm writing about steering the Staten Island ferry between Staten Is- land and New York City. I really intended to review the Dead. The last time I saw them (Michigan State University, last March), they had me almost wanting to be a groupie. I have never seen a group so together and with the ability to take over It was a fine day to hitch, once 5,000 persons with them. we got started. Sunny skies, not So, when I heard they would too hot, everything was fine- be playing at Gaelic Park in New until we got about 100 miles from York City, it was natural for me New York. Then the first bad to want to see if they could do it luck made its appearance. It again. started to pour buckets. Not just the light buckets that let up after FIFTEEN HOURS on the road a couple of hour, but the kind hitching to New York was not that continue for days. too high a price to pay, consider- ing the fact that there was a pos- sibility that we could get into the Who concert on Saturday night and see the Harrison - Shankar concert on Sunday. So, early Thursday morning, making the supreme sacrifice, I dragged myself to the corner of Washtenaw and Hill at 5 in the morning. Even the sun wasn't sure if it was going to wake itself up. 420 Maynard Street, Ann Arbor, Mich. Edited and managed by students at the University of Michigan Editorials printed in The Michigan Daily express the individual opinions of the author. This must be noted in all reprints. Tuesday, August 3, 1971 News Phone: 764-0552 NIGHT EDITOR: ALAN LENHOFF Summer Editorial Staff MARCIA ABRAMSON LARRY LEMPERT Co-Editor Co-Editor THE FARMERS in the mid- west are crying for rain. But they don't get it. The only far- mers around New York that I know of are tourists. They don't want rain. I didn't want rain. Rain I can get in Michigan. But nonetheless, it did rain. It rained Thursday, and Friday until about 3 p.m. Thank goodness, the radio kept proclaiming that rain or shine, the Dead would play if the people would come out to hear them. So the people came, but the Dead didn't. When we got off the subway, about 1,000 people were still there--all incredulous. People had come from as far away as Michigan and Ohio, we had met them on the road-all to hear and see the Grateful Dead. When we got off the subway, we also saw a sign saying that the concert was cancelled. It was. Police were standing around-- the same policemen who would patrol the outside park for the concert. This time, however, their function was to inform peo- ple that the concert would not be, AT THAT TIME, I began to feel all the bad things that happened while we were hitching. The hour-and-a-half wait outside of Cleveland for the ride that lasted ten minutes; the policeman stop- ping us on Washtenaw and Hill and searching my pack; getting let off in pouring rain; and at times thinking that no one would pick us up. When you're all set to write a fine review, it is dis- appointing to think of wasted ef- fort. I stopped crying after about an hour and began to hope that that was the end of the bad luck. There was a slight possibility that we could get into the Who the next night. This woman was working on it. Spirits started to get higher, and the possibility became more than a probability. Hut there was a day to wait be- fore we would know for sure. It seems that the Who are so famous now that they feel that they don't need press. The tour managers have neglected to leave press tickets set aside. This means that people can pay money and about a hundred lucky peo- ple can fill the press seats-at a cost, of course. The same thing is happening at the Who concert scheduled for Detroit. There are no press seats. But one can al- ways hope, Saturday we got the bad news. She had tried, but there was no way we were going to that con- cert either. At this point, although we were used to disappointments, we decided we would ride the Staten Island Ferry, probably the cheapest tourist and fun cruise in New York, ALL THE WAY to Staten Island we looked at the green Statue of Liberty, raising her fist "right on". It is almost possible to see how an immigrant might get choked up about her. I mean, she's all lighted up, standing on her own island-but after about ten min- utes of looking, I think that the overheard comment "she might make a good wife for the jolly green giant" was more apropos. But enough - bored with look- ing at Miss Liberty, I decided to see what was going on in the pilot house while the rest of the people on the boat were looking in the water. That's how a music reviewer ended up steering the boat. I didn't intend to do anything of the sort, but Tony, one of the deck hands, sent us to the cap- tain, who explained all the in- tricacies of being a skipper be- tween the two points. We watched the radar pick up ships, tugboats and pleasure craft in the area, and change the circle of the radar from I to 1 mile radius. Meanwhile, other people were turning the wheel. I'm sure that there is a nautical term for this, but we had the ship on course, which was more than I could say for the week- end. ft Letters to The Daily\ 4 Misinformation To The Daily: THE DAILY has done a great disservice to all draft-age males in the Ann Arbor area by publish- ing an article concerning the draft (Daily, July 29) that was grossly inaccurate at best and a mockery of factual reporting at worst. More than half the information was incorrect and the conclus- ions drawn by the reporter have no basis in the facts known at this time. My own comments were mis- quoted three times in the article. Individuals who would like in- formation about the draft would get more reliable information by contacting their local board or by. coming to the Draft Counselling Center at 502 E. Huron. The center will, be glivng out informa- tion on the new draft law as we receive it. -Steve Gard Ann Arbor Draft Counselling Center August 2 People's store? To The Daily: I RECENTLY had occasion to sell a several months old law book -bought new for $16.50. Natur- ally, I went to the student-owned and run University Cellar - you remember, the store that was go- ing to end the rip-offs in the used book industry. They searched their souls and magnanimously offered me $5.00, whereupon I re- treated to Overbeck's and, at least got $8.00, not quite one half price. . . plus ca change.. -C. Michael Abbott July 30 Fair to fair To The Daily: I MUST COMPLIMENT Larry Adelson on his fine and forthright art review (Daily, July 24). He is so right about the Ann Arbor Street Fair production of the more ambitious sort and many of the others too. It needed to be said, and he did it very well. -Jean Paul Slusser July 25 Letters to The Daily should be mailed to the Editorial Di- rector or delivered to Mary Rafferty in the Student Pub- lications business office in the Michigan' Daily bullding. Let- ters should be typed, double- spaced and normally should not exceed 250 words. The Editorial Directors reserve the right to edit al letters sub- mitted. It t