August 17
Our Town
The Flying Monkey has opened on Main Street, the old movie house
renovated. Next week we might go to a program--a dance theater event. In
the front of the house, seats for about 300 people; in the rear, on graduated
tiers, room where about a hundred people can have a light dinner and drinks.
Downstairs now two movie viewing theaters. Pretty nice for a town
so small. All thanks to Alex Ray, our state restaurant mogul, who started
his empire in an old house in Ashland around 1974.
Also new this fall, on the university campus, a big new ice
arena. Already open, hosting community and school activities and the
university hockey teams starting in a few weeks.
And at Frosties, another Alex Ray locale, a new ice cream flavor
created by Brendan Monroe, "Aunt Ruth's Lemon," one of the finest ice
cream flavors either of us have ever enjoyed. Not a sherbet nor a sorbet
but a real creamy ice cream flavored with fresh lemons (it seems) and just
sublime.
August 18 Our
Town, Dirty Water
Nasty brown water coming out of the cold water tap this morning
and in the toilet. Rusty, swampy looking stuff making you wonder what all
else might be in there. Filled up a a jar of it to take to the water and
sewer office later. This and that came up. Few hours later, on a
short walk out front, we noticed the water and sewer trucks in front of our neighbor
across the street. Then we saw a big pipe up at the hospital a block away
gushing forth. Back to the neighbors where we chatted with her and Gary
from W&S. He's only been there three years, so I told him how it has
happened before, years before, often this time. No one knows what is
causing it. Back inside I call W&S. Very apologetic and tired
of being on the phone, Maureen explains they finally found out what it
was---someone at the college decided to flush the campus sprinkler system, notified
no one, didn't quite know how to do it right etc etc etc. I'm hoping the
head of such things at the uni will email an apology to help town-gown
bruisings once again. So far no sign.
I asked Maureen to have my bill adjusted so I would not pay for
the near hour I had spent around the house trying to flush the dirty stuff away
and get a clear flow again. Neighbor had said Gary had turned off her
meter while they did that.
Maureen said, yes, I understand so I will switch you over to
Melissa because she handles that. No, no I insisted to Maureen, just
write the message down on paper and hand it to Melissa when you get a chance
later today. Oh, ok, sure I can do that.
So--young people born after a certain year might not realize
that we used to write messages down on paper and not just forward the caller on
or text the msage. That yearly Beloit mindset thing published today.
August 18, 2010 Madrid 1982
letter found yesterday sorting
through the boxes we are unpacking
from The University of Chicago
Press
January 29, 1982
Professor Robert Garlitz
c/o Sra Angelita Royo
Pesnion Maitergos
Esparteros 11 3er piso
Madrid 12 ESPANA
[now it appears online as --
Amaika Hotel Madrid
Esparteros, 11, 3º, Madrid, Spain]
Dear Professor Garlitz:
You were one of the first twenty to respond to the University of
Chicago Press's offer of a free copy of our Chicago originals in exchange for
your opinion of it. I have arranged for our warehouse to send you a copy
of REPRESENTATIONS AND THE IMAGINATION to you address in Spain. Don't
hesitate to le me know if it fails to arrive within a reasonable time.
I'm looking forward to reading your comments.
Sincerely,
Janet Deckenbach
Publicity Department
one of those pale blue aerogrammes
that we used then.
here she is now in the staff
directory online---not sure of the date--
Jan Deckenbach • Assistant Paperbacks Editor • 702-7034
PENSION MAITERGOS ON ESPARTEROS was where I first saw an Afghan
person in person. A young man, maybe 16 or 18, skin a darkish red of a
sort I had never seen before, windblown looking, wild black hair probably
recently and badly cropped and an expression that took your breath
away----wild, stunned, shocked, as it turned out, traumatized. He was a
refugee, he had seen his whole family killed before his eyes. At the time
I did not know by who, what was going on in his home country that he
would have been in asylum somehow there in Spain. It was the time Russia
was in Afghanistan and the US was training fighters to resist them.
In the same pension there were also Cuban immigrants.
Those I had met before back home but the ones I knew, a few I could count on
both hands, were decidedly upper class and highly educated. In fact at
our little state college we had a history professor who had been a young lawyer
in Cuba when Castro and Ché took over and whose father was the one who most
likely would have overthrown Batista had the elections transpired as should
have happened before the armed revolution. But in Madrid then in this
pension we saw Cuban refugees of a lower class who were passing their days in
endless boredom, waiting. They had something to live on and enough hope
or expectation that, being in Spain, they could go every day to the US embassy
and apply for a visa as a political refugee. (Maybe the Afghan fellow was
doing the same thing, but he was linguistically beyond our
comprehension). Every day they would go to the embassy and ask about
their visas, wait in long lines, put a ten second inquiry into a bureaucrat's
tiny window, wander the streets, have a coffee again, a shot of brandy or wine,
kill time, come back late to the pension, make noise, try to sleep, argue,
start over again in the morning. I think some had been there for months,
trying to get to New York or Miami.
We were there trying to pinch pennies, on a sabbatical semester.
Virginia worked in the libraries, David went to kindergarten, "Santa
Claus" and "Mi Escuela," where in the final pageant that closed
the school year, he wore an elaborate crepe paper costume that turned him into
a large evergreen tree.
August 18, 2010
No comments:
Post a Comment