Rev. Hults & harsh teacher, not a dictator. Attention must be paid. In times o f crisis, it’s as tempting as it is foolish to define ourselves and o u r lives in terms o f our fears. We must also, it stands to reason, be wary o f those who feed them. We must remember that people with something to sell (a giant Tonka tru c k a boiler plate stock a corporate financed police state) will do The best o f times, the worst o f times, times that try the whatever it takes to make us buy i t A great revealed truth o f our soul. W orld in upheaval, civilization in peril and, even for those not time was delivered by Deep T h ro a t Follow the Money. The leader living in Afghanistan, personal lifestyles rudely interfered with. An o f our nation refers to us, not as citizens, but as consumers. We are anxious and annoyed nation worries aloud: what then must we do? now, not so much the lantern o f freedom as its imported plastic In any conflict of arms o r the sp irit the best first move is to identify flashlight that comes on when you clap your hands. The business of the enemy. America has become, not just part o f a well ordered society, but the There's an anonymous bit of all weather advice hanging order o f society itself. Attention must be paid. on my office wall: Tell me to what you pay attention and I will tell By some dark and subtle magic, a noble experiment you who you are. It’s one o f those t-shirt sized maxims that can, involving two centuries o f hard work on the part o f millions of when matters become problematic, save a person’s bacon. Matters mostly well meaning people has devolved into a stimulus/response have become problematic. Actually, they’re just a click or two shy of reflex most often associated with insects, reptiles and crack dealers: critical. Don’t feel good enough? I W ant to feel better?, Don’t have enough? Crisis o f any sort distills life to its fundamentals: this is, in I W ant more? We’re encouraged to be fearful and unsatisfied by fact what crisis is for. Crisis is nature’s way o f telling us what we’re people and market forces whose very existence depends upon i t doing isn’t working; that it was either a dumb idea to start with or The thoughtful have long suspected this is not a recipe for lasting that the conditions in which it did work have changed. It offers success. proof, undeniable and immediate, that we’ve been ignoring the little In the meantime, leading lives that are, relative to ninety red lights flashing on the control panel. Crisis means that percent o f humanity, burdened with staggering wealth and privilege, someone’s dropped the ball. In terms o f society, it’s the critical we’d become, long before September, a nation o f self-professed mass of social change; that historic moment when events make the victims. By a cruel quirk o f fate, not even obscene levels o f excess sound o f a teapot coming to boil. protected us from feeling, in one vague way o r another, unfairly put If the events o f recent days tell us anything it’s that upon: our nation’s inner child rebelling with laughable cayse. The attention must be paid. The question, o f course, is to what? Much rallying cry o f this neurotic little uprising was, in simplest terms, this: more than we know, o r want to imagine, hangs on our answer. A They said if we bought all the stuff we'd be happy, so we did but hint was provided recently by an Afghani woman, naturally we’re still n o t If, having done everything television told us to do, nameless. Sitting in the dust and rubble o f her world, being instead o f being happy, we feel hollow, unfulfilled and ill-used, it can interviewed by a well nourished reporter with access to clean sheets, only mean that something o r someone, is actively interfering with cold beer and laundry facilities, the woman summed up her our bliss. Bad things don’t happen to excellent people (so the realpolitik *1 just want the world to be q u ie t’ theory goes), certainly not worry and stress, unless there’s someone But the world, both hers and ours, isn’t quiet now. For who can be sued. Long before September, our national mantra had those with ears to hear, it hasn’t been quiet for some time. In the mutated, not all that quietly, from e pluribus unum (out o f many, sixty years since W orld W ar II, the second war to end all wars, one) to: it’s not my fault, I don’t have time for this and somebody roughly one hundred and fifty wars have been waged on the planet needs to pay. by people who, given a choice, would have found something else to Aside from self-righteousness, hubris and broad spectrum do. Quiet doesn't precipitate crisis; what precipitates crisis is not gluttony, our national character seems lately to be mostly about listening to the whispers and moans of disorder; to the grinding worry. Worry is, o f course, inertia; a slow motion form o f terror, our background noise o f life out o f balance. Attention must be paid. brain chemistry’s answer to gravitational collapse. Worry debilitates Nothing alters an organism, either biological o r social, and paralyzes the will by turning life into a web o f immovable forces more surely or more radically than fear. Fear constricts tissues and against which resistance is futile. Adm itting no solution, worry narrows perceptions into the binomial mathematics o f survival: fight demands that the Dorothy in us surrender if possible, o r flight Fear can be, if not a friend, at least an ally, terror, on the unconditionally. For this reason, in the entire homemade, other hand, is its own worst enemy. Fear calls us to necessary impromptu pageant o f human history, researches have failed to action; terror makes action o f any kind unlikely and appropriate unearth a single instance in which a difficult situation, let alone a action a matter o f blind lu ck Fear focuses the mind; terror serious historical challenge, was made one bit better by worry. The confuses. Left to itself, it becomes panic, which Webster defines as only known antidote to wony is action. As an old friend, a gardener, ’ an unreasoning terror often accompanied by mass flight" once observed while digging a hole in the rain: “It’s hard to be When panic becomes a proper noun, an historic social depressed when you’re doing something’ W hat then must we do? moment trumpeted in by the sound o f millions o f boiling teapots, The first step o f any journey is not, strictly speaking a step the change o f state is described as “a sudden widespread fright at all. The first step is to determine where exactly you are. We concerning financial affairs and resulting in a depression in values would be wise to, as Bob Dylan suggested twenty years ago, admit caused by violent measures for protection o f securities or other that the waters around us have grown and accept that soon we ll be property.’ Interesting words, Values’ and securities’. The past is a drenched to the bone. The times are changing the winds are gusting and we need to be our own weathermen. Before we set foot on any path, we must accept that, for you and I and the Afghani woman, and the billions o f her fellow humans who just want the world to be quiet, forces have been unleashed that are, for the most part, wildly out o f our control. They are, as point o f fa ct out of the control o f those who’ve unleashed them. A new hand has been dealt and m ost if not all, bets are off. BUSINESS CARDS We must remember the old joke, no less funny now than O n tn t before: if you want to hear the universe laugh, tell it what you’re SIGNS & BANNERS Jeff 6 Gladys doing tomorrow. We must remember also that the purest act of LAMINATING/FLYERS W oaack freedom is laughter. Like it o r n o t the game’s afo o t W hat’s begun BROCHURES/FORMS is the next leg o f the adventure: our expedition o f discovery to find 1338 8. Hemlock OFFICE SUPPLIES what it means to be.human. Since turning back o r stopping aren’t P.O ritaaM S Cannon Beach, OR options, we might just as well pull our fears out and hold them to FAST U PS SERVICE ; •tu « the lig h t COMPUTER SUPPORT (803)436-3000 Are we afraid we’ll lose our jobs? It could certainly INTERNET ACCESS Fax (803) 436-0746 happen. The economy was, long before September, sliding into NOTARY SERVICE what could easily become an unparalleled global depression. The only certainty is uncertainty; the only guarantee is that there never was one. Aside from doing ou r best w o rk not just for the pay but for the satisfaction that’s in i t there’s nothing to be done. Indeed I tremble for my country when I Are we worried we’ll be in the wrong place at the right reflect that God is just. time and watch, frozen like a deer in headlights, as the shining — Thomas Jefferson wings o f random doom bank toward us in a shallow dive? It could certainly happen. There’s also no reason in the world it couldn’t be carrying a crude but effective nuclear device purchased with a credit card in an open air m arket Aside from staying as far away as possible from anything worth blowing up, there’s n o t as they say, diddley-squat we can do about i t or, ju st as importantly, not do. çà Are we worried about anthrax (already responsible for as A dditions many deaths as an unremarkable freeway accident), small pox or G eneral C ontracting any o f the several unspeakably unpleasant plagues that could erupt Q uality C onstruction tomorrow morning at a shopping mall near us? It could certainly R emodel happen. According to the experts (the same experts who, we 3^* L evel - S tabilize recently team, knew very little about the anthrax they knew enough C e ll: 440-0278 F a x:7 1 7 -0 3 8 9 about to design and sell delivery systems for), life could become, P.O. Box 2577 Gearhart, OR 97138 quickly and w ithout warning, an immunological crap shoot Beyond 738-7563 CCB# 114007 moving into o u r backyard isolation bunkers, which we can be confident will h it the market soon, there are no precautions to be taken. told him I would be back in December and that M r Whitman Are we, at bottom then, merely worried about dying? We had offered me the writers’ room for a week. He said he was all die. Dying is part o f life. The real challenge, the only challenge leaving in December and maybe I could help with the rare to the thoughtful, is choosing to live well; which is to say, with purpose, dignity, awareness and compassion. books as well. I wandered back among the stacks and found an old Some time ago, on public radio, a young man being slowly brought down by AIDS read an essay he’d written about his volume from the twenties It was about someone's adventures personal adventure in mortality. He was diagnosed early on in the in the gold and diamond mines o f South Africa at the turn o f plague (twenty m illion dead and just beginning no news at eleven) the century. It was a dusty little orange book with no dust and his doctor advised him to get his affairs in order. So, as best he jacket, jammed sideways on the shelf I had merely planned to could, he did. He prepared his family and friends, did whatever straighten it out, but when I opened it I saw that it was, first, paper work that needed doing and worked hard to find a measure not priced; second, a first edition, and third, signed by the o f peace with his new reality. The first drugs appeared. He author. On further investigation I found a letter from the responded well to them and his prognosis drastically improved. ’ So now,’ he said, “I wasn’t going to die." He prepared once more to author tucked inside, telling o f his plans to return to the gold live. He made plans and new acquaintances, scheduled vacations fields and diamond mines It was dated 1927. I took it to the and rejoined human society. When the disease came back with a young men who were sitting at the front desk I pointed out the vengeance, the doctor gave him new drugs, but the new drugs made various qualities o f the book, and they allowed how that “made him sick and weak and one day he just stopped taking them. “So it worth something ” I took a deep breath and said “Yes, that now," he said, “Tm dying again.’ He has, like the rest o f us, no clear is true. H ow much is the question ” notion when. A t the time he told his story, a year had passed. They had no idea, so I just smiled and asked them to Being unable to hold down a job, he has a wealth o f time on his hands. To fill it well, he takes long walks. As he walks, he chants put it behind the counter and said I would be back I didn't the mantra his disease has taught him: “I am living I am dying I am mention that it would be in December and that I would come living I am dying...’ to w ork, not to buy Attention must be paid. Behind the Times Ms. Coyne Michael Burgess Editorial Now & Then After an eventful first month for Sally and myself, Billy sent us a gift that he would like to share with our readers 1 traveled to Paris last year and returned with stars in my eyes and a longing to return I had found the city o f my dreams W ith all o f its beauty and history, my most treasured spot was a tiny bookstore tucked in the shadows o f Notre Dame. Billy shared my infatuation with this magical bookstore and what follows is a story o f his first day in the City o f Lights and finding Shakespeare & Company Enjoy There are few place on the planet that could be considered living shrines, and even fewer that are living shrines to literature The only one 1 can think o f is Shakespeare & Co. in Paris The original Shakespeare & Co. was founded by Sylvia Beach in the early twenties and became a legendary hang out for writers and artists - Hemingway, Stein, Picasso, Joyce, who haunted the place until the Second W orld W ar came along. The latest English language bookstore in Paris to bear the name Shakespeare & Co was started in the fifties by George Whitman, who is the great grandson o f W alt Whitman. M r Whitman carried on the traditions o f Sylvia Beach, housing her library o f books which may be read but not purchased H e also started his own traditions, perhaps the most legendary is the Tumbleweed Hotel which is upstairs at Shakespeare & Co. The ‘hotel’ is for the most part just a series o f beds that are tucked away in the tiny rooms o f the library. There is a kitchen o f sorts and there is a ‘writers room’ by M r. Whitman's apartment which is private. Unlike most hotels it doesn’t cost money to stay. Having read stories o f Paris and Shakespeare & Co. for years, I was amazed to find myself one October evening in the C ity o f Lights. 1 had been met at the train station by George Contos, who has lived abroad for fifty o f his seventy- some years. H e and a very nice couple who were his dear friends took me in hand They invited me for dinner, allowed me to check my e-mail, and got me settled in my hotel. George left me to freshen up and said he would meet me in an hour and a half In ten minutes, I had showered, changed my shirt and was on the street in front o f the hotel. I saw George waiting at a cafe, but he didn't see me I could feel Shakespeare & Co. I knew by the map that it was just a few blocks away, and I could see the top o f Notre Dame, but even without those clues, I could actually feci it. I turned right at á bakery, went past a Jazz club, crossed a busy street and ther?«,^,little below street level, was a shabby rag and bone shop o f the heart. I caught my breath, and wandered up to the door. There were books in boxes and on shelves outside; there was a small table on the sidewalk where a family o f three were having their dinner A tall red-haired man, a beautiful Asian woman and a small girl o f beautiful mixed heritage. A fter J a few minutes in the shop where I boldly walked up the stairs to the Tumbleweed Hotel as though I belonged there, I went back to the sidewalk. I had brought copies o f the books I had S published, and a few copies o f the paper. I stood o ff to the side watching the family have dinner on the sidewalk, oblivious to the chaos o f Paris around them. Finally I caught the woman's °o Zero, the magazine that comes from the Shakespeare & Co. family I showed him the paper and the books and asked i f M r. o Whitman was around The little girl jumped up and said, “D o you want to meet George? H e w ill be down in a minute!” I was about to reply when the door to the upper apartments opened and there was George Whitman, himself. Thin, scruffy, but with eyes that sparkled when the child had he done this? H o w many wide eyed writer wannabes, hero worshippers, giggling school girls, had stood on this sidewalk, and stammered and stuttered as he tried to be polite and understand I handed him the books and he the red-haired man told him that I published them M r. Whitman started to explain that Shakespeare & Co. only sells used books, but I said, no, they were a gift H e slammed the books down on a bench and 1 felt like he was about to give me a lecture about how many lousy books people drop o ff everyday, and on and on.. he does have a frightful temper according to legend But instead, he reached into his pocket and bringing out a large ring o f very unusual keys, handed them to me “Then I w ill give you a gift,” he said, indicating one particular key “This is the key to the writers’ room, you may stay for a week i f you like.” Until the day I die I w ill never know why I didn't just say thank you and go upstairs. I know I had a room and a dinner date, and all that, but at that moment I was invited to be a part o f a long history o f a holy place. Something like Jesus beckoning to Peter saying, “Come with me and I will make you a fisher o f men,” and Peter saying, “W ell, okay, but I I I be along after steelhead season.” Actually that is a bit pretentious It is a well known fact that that key has been offered and accepted by knaves and fools as well as lovers o f words and legends o f literature. H e M o re later love, Billy In iP P E R L E F T E P o Z Z l o f the books I had produced, he just offered shelter It is what he has always done It is what he w ill always do It is not about me. I returned the next day to watch the shop open and the tourists get their pictures taken in front o f it I met Simon, who kind o f runs the rare book room He's English and we hit it o ff W e got to talking about books and the war, and when a couple o f guys in suits came up to the glass door and started to come in, he shut it in their faces, and locked it “We're closed” he shouted at them, and calmly continued our conversation I I o O ¡X greeted him. The red-haired man explained that I was there to meet him A tired look came over his face. H o w many times 2 1 bsher OOHs/y. eye, and she said something to the redheaded man, and he turned and gave me his attention. I introduced myself and explained that I had been in contact with Quinn at Kilometer will offer shelter to anyone Period N o, he didn't see some spark o f genius in these bloodshot eyes, or note the fine quality A am ierrezxse dcccmbcr zoo J I to MOO copies are printed and distributed monthly In Oregon and to points around the world. the Beloved Reverend Billy Lloyd Hults /Editor on the Home Front, Llama Spiti Ansels Coyne Graphic* Editor, Proofreader, Lnyovrt: Sally Lackaff Behind the Tbaea, Undo Mfee, Z o d ia e t Michael Burgess P ro fe s s o r L ia d e e yi Peter I jndsey Lessor L e f t B o a ti Victoria StoppieDo June Kroft Dr Karkeys ' Ambling Bear Distribution W f NOW HAVE A WIDE VARIETY O f ORGANIC MOPUCTS ORGANIC PRODUCE Advertising Rates Editor, PwbUaker, Jaaitor in ■bacati*, W a r Corrnapoadnat i •MARINER MARKET* C AG E F R EE EGGS FREE R A N G E CHICKEN Business Card size 1/16th approx. 3x5 1/Bth approx. 4x7 1/4 approx. 6 1/2x9 1/2 page Full page Back page $40 $50 $60 $110 $160 $350 $450 TOFU 4 SOY CHEESE ORGANIC GOLD M EDAL FLOUR ORGANIC MILK ORGANIC CORN M EA L FRESH HERBS FA N TA STIC SOUPS S M IX E S WHOLE W HEAT FLOUR ORGANIC CORN CHIPS A LA R G E SELECTION FROM BOB’S RED MILL ....A N D M U C H MORE • 1 3 9 N. HEMLOCK CANNON BEACH 436 2442« per month Payment is due the 15th of the month prior to the issue in which the ad is to appear All ads must be 'camera ready" We are usually on the streets by the first week-end of the month If this situation w ere a car that you had, how long would you drive It? —Bill "Wacky" Wlckland on the State of the Union