Dear Reverend and Friends Editorial February, and the sun has been r ismg ear her and warmer The news h « been bleak all w in te r. tales of Now & Then March, (insert any lion/lam b joke here,, here at the bookstore we look forward to March It is the beginning of the Season, Spring Break, garage sales and usually lo t s ^ c v - » * '' * • •* í / / % pi .'h t / -J of f a»n We can expect a lot of folks to be v is itin g us here on the edge A lot of people bought the farm this winter, a lot of folks in America lost the farm, through no fault of their own they became instant ly homeless Though they have jobs, bank accounts and insurance, their homes are no longer standing They have to move, and we imagine a few w ill decide that the upper left edge is a pre tty good place We expect to sta rt seeing them this month They w ill be the ones asking about property taxes and f ix-er-uppers Don t worry - - most w ill move on, some might try it for a year or so Only a few w ill last two w inters, and they'll be okay, because they w ill become your neighbors, friends, locals As w e w rite this it is s t ill the dangerous month of February We attended a gathering in Cannon Beach Chamber Building brought to us by the Coast Range Association Clatsop Chapter, and got to see the new book Clear Cut ($30 from Sierra Club Books) Thousands of copies w ill be given away free to p o litic a l leaders, the timber industry, w ild life managers (now that s an oxymoron), fishing organizations, etc etc We believe it w ill be available in the Cannon Beach, Lincoln City, Tillamook, Newport, Astoria, Seaside, Portland. Eugene, and Salem Libraries So take a look, it's scary, but true Hult» And as I sit here, listening to the crow on the roof actoss the street laughing at something he s seen or heard, the sun ripples softly across my face and I think ihet maybe there is some way ,0 really do something good The idee congeals In the not too distant future when all the key power brokers and technocrats and their neural partners are zipping down the virtual super highway, trading virtu al information and doing virtu al lunch, while they are all busy and preoccupied with virtual war and network sex simpty reach out and unplug the thing After all it's just a game I'm not anti technology, but I recognize that I am of the earth, and that the evolution of humanity all along has been dependent on the natural world and whan thet wor Id is gone we w ill perish There is no technology that w ill wipe away our Karmic debt or allow us to live on an uninhabitable planet, and retirement into a silicon chip is not my idee of a good time On days like today I find myself thinking, hoping, that we w ill find a way out of this science fiction horror future we have written for ourselves, but I am a middle agad hippie with moderate IQ and one thing I k now 13 that the piper must be paid ( or is that the Ferryman'’ ) By the way. the reason that the Seastdt City Council can define the estuary as being bounded by a fresh water coastal lake 13 because in politics meaning 13 a rb itra ry , words only have meaning in context to the laws being subver ted Until next time Takecare Sshh, Ain't tell anyone, but. Friday March 4th is the Bir tfiday of The Humble Ms Sally Louise Lack o f f Yes. the women who makes the Edge look like it does, the woman who proof r eads every word before you see it. the woman who does it all is another y w older There are plans to take her toasleezy bar and later to end up at B ill s ( is there something redundwit here9 only kidding Ken') so. of oourse, we invite all our r aader s to come on down and buy her a beer, or something (She has expressed an interest in mountain or oceanfront real estate, and trips to Par is are always a nice gesture ) Seriously, this paper is only possible because of Solly s talent, intellegence, compassion, and infinite patience with your beloved editor Happy Birthday. Salty we love you' ( Since Sally lays out the p<<«r, we had to slip this in on the way to the printers, so she dicki t proof read i t . any mistakes are your beloved editors alone, and gives you an indication of why we need her so badly') | ’- U P P E R L E F T E D O L .,| C oast R ange A ssociation jfr The beloved Pr »<-»,.• P O . BOX 148 Billy Lloyd Hull', Staqel I due alien Id lt o r Fe’er .?•*, Meanwhile in New port A - ..»I Im provisational fn q in eer u 1 . 1 ,« P o litic a l Consultant I j. I«» •.rusr.j'. Investiqat ive R eporters ” , Puzzle Parson . iu .-r Movies A food Pop fill,r<%n A ta R eporter in Portland A 4. Mr Baseball m - e • ta le s of the Northern S e a t, ’j, I or al Color 1 j.w Poet in Residence f II..« « fo re lq n Correspondents w i > 1 uBarnon S L’ ji 14 ihamey W orld Heat Mr he a wor ..,n Gardening Id lt o r : AuqusU fenejir t e» I 1 I Ib rls Pn,; f Wild W it *n; « and a 1 ait of ihou>endt Zim LEntû& E MUCH )W Larry Bailey Seaside. OR V 7 Assistant I di to r/G ra p h ic s Id lto r Tr> lucnbia Ms >ai\ lowi .a .«<.» j i f Science Id llo r /V o lc e of Reeson/lndian ( o u n try/lin e la M ik e /a lc . f ' . f.a»l I 4« W ild llfe/M u slc R ep o rter 1 helix and stripped the chromosome of its mystical name, inserted silicon chrism wafers into the gr»/matter of american test subjects to better facilitate the changing of consciousness, found new and improved uses for the aborted fetus The horror of old 1940 s r ad 1 at ion ex per iments are nothing compared to the (unfilled wor Id of techno-rape of the 9 0 s Meanwhile, here in Seaside they are going ahead with the plan to build condos on the estuary In esoteric symbolism birds represent the human soul, so I winder if this project is in reality a sign to the cosmos that humanity has decided to build a rune for all to see and ponder, the rune cal led "Deethwish' The inscription w ill tell of a society that hated the body and its sexual desires, thet loethed neture end her non-conformity A society whose biggast industry is war Next issue w ill mark the beginning of our th ird year and we would like to thank the lite ra lly hundreds of folks who have helped us put out the Edge Our readers and subscribers, all over the country, like Alan Schoenberg, the Salt King of Brooklyn, Ellen Harmon, the Family Dog Veteran, in New Mexico, (Hi, Aunt Ellen1 I'll w rite soon, I promise'), and Tony in Australia And our Advertisers, like Mike's Bikes, who has been there fa ith fu lly every month since the beginning The same goes for Laurel s Wine Shop"' And not just for the checks, but for the moral support and inform ation that we all need to know And our contributors, who open their hearts and minds monthly, and give their talents so that we can share them Well, we could go on forever, and we plan to Our April issue w ill be dedicated to the people who bring you the Edge each month See you then I d itn r/P u b lis h e r science and cyberspace haze turned my blood the color of chrome Black ice It'S a brave new wor Id. and the tin goto of the avwite garde have chosen their pr tests with care ’All praise the L'/berChrist1' They have unravelled the double * . NEWPORT. OR Speak mg of the Coast Range Assoc , these folks are busy Feb 16th they held a meeting in Manzanita thet brou^it 5 0 people together in the middle of a gale to give theOOOT and OOF earful about ciearcutting in general and cleercutting scenic buffer zones on Hwy 10 1 in particular Examples9 Oreg Movsesyan, owner of Manzenita News A Espresso 'You've been watching this happen for twenty years It is your responsibility to offer alternative ways of forestry - - but you don't'" Chuck W ilie r , Director of the CRA, quoted Forester Dor don Robinson "You don't have to be a professional forester to recognize bad forestry any more than you need to be a doctor to re callize ill health If logging looks bad, it is bad " In defending the clearcuts, Janet McLennan, Chair of the Oregon Board of Foresty, stated in a recent letter to Michelle Syver son. member of the CRA. "It remains a viable harvesting method for Douglas fir because of regeneration requirements for the species, economics, and technology for operating on steep terrain This practice also creates big game and other habitat that would not be viable with partial cuts" Yeh, right Check out the CRA They are having fun and mak mg waves it snnt often we find an image that puts the universe into perspective, provides some conceptual fxx4 to hang in fin ity on, some sound of one hand clapping that spot welds the micro and the macrocosm Ready for some fun'' 6 Edelman, who tends her garden in the •department of neuroptology at Scripps Research Institute, gives th e thougntful food for it Noting that the cerebral cortex, that part of the Pram we think of as the Pram, is. at bottom, a cooperative community of ten b illio n nerve cells, Edelman points out " a calculation of how many combinations and permutations there are of such an entity, which is the lesser part of the brain, results in.' s ittin g down, are we9, "the number 10 followed by ten m illio n zeros * Shall we take a moment from our busy day to consider such a number9 Remembering that each lit t le zero m ultiplies the last one by ten No. yoi couldn t , not even if you counted real fast By now, the thoughtful among us are saying, wow, if the potential of our lit t le punk in heads is that big, how big must the furshlugginer universe be9 To get a handle on this, the bulk of the observable universe consists of charged particles 'There are," Edelman cites, "10 followed by 80 zeros of positively charged p a rtic le s " Of course for every positive particle, or proton, there is a negative particle, an electron This mating brings the total of observable m atter to 10 followed by 160 zeros, making the ra tio between the universe and our a b ility to make meaning from it the number 10 followed by 9,999,840 zeros While this gives horrible new meaning to the term stupid mistake , it doesn't mean there aren t mysteries the profane mind w ill never penetrate There just aren't as many as we like to think What there are, are a lot of ways to look at things More, as they say, than are in heaven and earth Synaptic short c irc u its being what they are, we re reminded of a story An old monk and his student are walking through the forest They come to a river Standing on the bank is a young woman w ith a heavy bundle, looking hesitantly at the stream The old monk says to her, "Climb on my shoulders, daughter, I w ill carry you across* The young woman accepts graciously and soon the three of them are on the far shore, whereupon the young woman thanks the old monk and walks off down the path The two monks travel several m iles in silence, the student deep in thought Finally, the old monk says, "You are troubled, lit t le bro th e r' His student nods "The rules of our order says we must not touch women" "Yes," his old teacher says And yet you carried the woman across the river on your shoulders" The old monk smiles, in that way old monks do. and says Yes, but unlike you, I put her down long ago" The number 10 followed by ten m illio n zeros n jF T E K LEFT EDGE SUBSCRIPTION^ stmi&tv. fWUN&ADNBS: M W VM0 (Rttl « W T Okwt THdtTY MUMS 1« TMt VTTEI KTT L&W r u n 1222 CMN9N BtACM, On IH IQ • Koo PQR a TtAk’S RIA0IM6 or T H ) •