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May 3, 2005
Name: Susan Karat MacAdams (AKA- The Cheeze)
Married Douglas Elek MacAdams on June 22, 2002 in Northern Michigan,
Douglas's first marriage, my second.
I have two children by first marriage: girls, ages 17 & 19, Zinta and Erika.
Douglas has one daughter, age 30, from a prior relationship with a Bolshevik.
I
moved from Baltimore to Montgomery East dormitory in 1969. I lived on
the ground floor at the end of the hall. It was a very private
arrangement and I could climb right out the window and walk down to
Route One. That's how I used to go to work at Big Boy's. I wore lots of
make-up, a tight skirt, and an orange apron. Douglas introduced me to
the Women's Lib meetings, and since I was studying architecture I went
to several meetings thinking they would show me how to behave in a
working man's world, but I never understood those women. On several
occasions they tried to dominate me morally, but I was strong willed
and flirtatious, and had no intention of giving up a good thing. Plus,
I had attended a Catholic High School and among the nuns there were
several strong intellectuals, Notre Dame Graduates, part of the Daniel
Berrigan movement. After four years of their influential badgering, in
classes and the drama club, (plus a little of my mother's influence) my
consciousness had been tuned to a different wavelength; I was a working
girl and a pacifist, the Kumbaya type.
During the Route One
demonstration on May 1, 1970, my dorm room became a dusty tomb of tear
gas residue. Everyone was evacuated. I was beaten badly by a policeman,
clubbed with a metal stick and kicked in the backside. His footprint
left a huge purple welt. You could read his shoe size on my butt. So
afterwards, instead of carrying candles at evening marches around DC,
singing religious songs, and having quasi-ecstatic experiences, I
joined the resistance.
I attended some of the meetings where the
large demonstrations were organized and studied to be a Marshall with
Richard Fox and Gregory Dunkel. I remember Madison Jones, Larry
Babbitt, Joe Paul and Douglas MacAdams attending some of those
meetings. I never said a word, but I always wore the latest grooviest,
hippie gear: head band, long leather fringes, sweeping bell-bottoms.
The men had wonderful hair: long golden curls, frizzy Îfros (am I
thinking Louie Denrich?), lion manes. The meetings were also Very Male
Dominated, intense but informative, with a lot of heckling, debating.
It wasn't always clear who was in charge, but something dynamic was
always getting done. Heavy, sweet, challenging. It was an interior room
with florescent lights. People sat on top of desks, walked around,
gesticulating, ranting, deliberating. Never had been in a class like
that before or since, although later in life, some of the Hollywood
parties I attended would be as brilliant.
After my training, I
received a Marshall's blue armband with a white dove "Work for Peace."
I still have one of the stickers, a prized possession. One of my first
assignments was the demonstration held around the Washington Monument,
something like November 1970, where 100,000 people attended and Allen
Ginsberg spoke. I locked arms with the other Marshalls and had my back
to the stage, facing the crowd; it stretched like a sea up and around
the Monument. It was buck-ass cold, and everyone was wearing a hat, so
the sea bobbed in watch caps.
During the demonstration, Douglas found me, came right up in my face, fondly called me, "Pseudo-pig," and wandered off again.
At
nights, Gregory Dunkel ate at Big Boys in College Park, when I was the
cashier. I was in awe of him. Here was the man that helped organized
the demonstrations, and he used to pay me for his poached eggs. Last
time I saw Gregory he was leading a demonstration in Baltimore for
migrant farm workers.
I lived in University Gardens for about a
year. Then I moved to Takoma Park with Mona Lisa Heyman. We lived in an
old summer type cottage on Sycamore. I could ride my bicycle to the
campus. Douglas MacAdams also lived in TP and became my boyfriend
during that time. He had a car, a blue Corvaire with orange bumpers.
When Mona and I moved out, Bill Nelson, the jewelry Professor bought
the house and owned it for a long time. It was a beautiful place and I
loved it.
I left Takoma Park in 1972 and moved to New Mexico. I
didn't graduate. I attended the School of Architecture for five years
and didn't realize, until too late, that I should have been studying
engineering. The nuns in my high school wouldn't have known that. So I
went to New Mexico to explore other options. I was roommates with Andee
Kline in the mountains outside Albuquerque and worked in a frontier
town. They gave me a spotted Appaloosa quarter horse and a turquoise
blue cowboy hat. Later I moved to Santa Fe and worked as a cook and
bartender in the Ski Lodge. I remained friends with Andee and was later
in her wedding in Washington DC. She died of breast cancer in 1987.
Douglas
MacAdams fled Takoma Park and came out to Santa Fe about three months
after I did. The FBI was troubling his existence and the purported sky
cam was a heavy burden on him. I always felt that it had a deleterious
effect on our relationship. We remained sweethearts for a short time.
The FBI troubled him for quite a bit longer.
Douglas found a
restaurant job and stayed in Santa Fe another ten years. Those years
were a Golden Era in Santa Fe because whatever it was then is not what
it is now.
While working as a bartender at the ski lodge I met a
man who offered me a job working on the Washington DC Metro. So, in
1973, I moved back to College Park and into the Klowntown, a haphazard
old house near Frat Row. I think ten of us lived there that summer,
plus other nightly guests and friends. The house had a Carnival Clown
on its roof, the kind that you throw the bean bags in his mouth; the
name Klowntown grew out of the reunions that are still held in a
somewhat biannual manner. The house was located on sorority row and the
Clown's presence mocked the Greek symbols that were emblazoned on our
neighbors' stately brick homes.
That was the summer of beer and
circus. There was only one bathroom and we shared it whether we were
intimate roommates or not. Each week, by Saturday, a mountain of
bottles & beer cans would accumulate. A purging ritual was
necessary and it was more akin to the washing down of a naval ship,
perhaps because every floor in old house was covered in linoleum: the
stairs, the hallways, the kitchen, and the living room. John Clarke
would fill a bucket of warm water with suds and send it cascading down
the second story steps. The rest of us, manning mops, fanned the liquid
across the floors and back out through the kitchen and down the back
stairs. Life was simple then, and our opinions, out in the open.
Seems
that every resident of Klowntown had taken an active part in the
demonstrations, either for party or political reasons and drugs were
part of that communion. Everyone was against the Viet Nam war, which
was still going on, and everyone was in agreement that Nixon and Agnew
were a pair of blockheads. The nightly news, still in black and white,
was always a major event. The summer was hot, the windows open to the
lush humid greenery and the voice of John Clarke could be heard at
least fifty yards from the house, yelling obscenities at the news. In
the living room would be Stanley with his laconic wit, and passing
through, Joe Paul, observing the speeches and delivering a rapid fire
comedy routine. Whatever went down in that house was a crucial
cornerstone for many of us, and a group soul emerged from that union.
Kumbaya, KlownKomrades, kumbaya.
Later,
Stanley, Dale Gyongyos and I moved down to 9th and Pennsylvania SE, on
the west side of Capitol Hill. It was still a crumbling neighborhood in
those days, full of charming large bay windows and antiquities
discarded in the alleyways. Stanley and I helped build the DC Metro
from Capitol Hill to the Stadium. Our house was located adjacent to the
Eastern Market Station and it was in the basement of that house that
Stanley and Dale built a studio and began to experiment with
stain-glass. Dale later made a living as a designer of large scale
modern church glass in Ohio. Stanley developed more of a fine arts,
street-wise approach, using discarded bottle bottoms and a rich, full
color spectrum that's worth a bar tour of South Baltimore, where his
glass is located.
I loved the money they paid me to be a Metro
Rail Engineer, but the work was tedious and I found ways to take long
breaks, by switching jobs, trading upwards in position, and taking long
summer vacations back in Santa Fe. I saw Douglas every summer and we
shared a whole tribe of friends, until 1981 when he moved to Seattle
and I moved to Los Angeles. But we continued to write to each other,
and I still had all those letters and moved them seventeen times until
we saw each other again.
Simultaneous to all this, while I had
lived in Santa Fe, I had a roommate named Greta, an actress, who later
married Bert Schneider, the man who produced "Easy Riders," and for a
good ten years I was invited along for the ride. Bert was the person to
bail out the Chicago Eight. He paid for their lawyer with the profits
from "The Monkees," which he also produced. He also won an Academy
Award in 1975 for "Hearts and Minds."
From "Easy Riders, Raging
Bulls": When Bert Schneider walked up to the podium to accept,
resplendent in an immaculate white tux, he stunned the glittering array
of celebrities and millions of TV viewers by conveying a "greeting of
friendship to all American people" from Ambassador Dinh Ba Thi, chief
of the Provisional Revolutionary Government delegation to the Paris
Peace talks. There was a moment of shocked silence, then a burst of
applause, punctuated by scattered hisses. ··Three weeks later, on the
morning of April 29, 1975, with Saigon surrounded by North Vietnamese
troops, South Vietnamese general Duong Van "Big" Minh surrendered. That
day the last American was airlifted by helicopter off the roof of the
American Embassy. The war was over."
In the late 70's, I used to
stay at the Schneider compound high up on a private ridge behind the
Beverly Hills Hotel. Bert was as resplendent naked, around the pool,
passing a joint, as he was accepting the Academy Award. He kept the
award on top of the fridge in the back pantry, like an old bowling
trophy.
We weren't suppose to talk about it at the time, but I
met Abbie Hoffman when he was underground. It was at a Hollywood party
in Manhattan. I was there with Mike Stanley and Allen Gall Carney.
Abbie's girlfriend tried to hit on Mike Stanley. I remember watching
them across the room and being shocked that a woman so glamorous was
flirting with Stan. He was such a rock, and she was one of the most
attractive women in the world.
Bert had paid for Abbie's nose
job, and it was a pretty cute nose, as I recall. I've forgotten what
his alias was, but there was a LOT of cocaine at that party. Abbie and
his girlfriend heard that I liked to visit the top of tall buildings,
so we agreed to visit the top of the World Trade Center the next day.
Four of us took a cab. It was crowded. I sat on the edge of the seat
wedged between Abbie and his girlfriend, an ex-model, six inches taller
than he. Her arms were encrusted with silver jewelry from Nepal and one
was wrapped across the seat in front of my face. She toyed with me,
verbally; she was incredibly bright. She asked about Stanley and I told
he had to go back to Baltimore to lay some brick. She said, "Ha! He
thinks he is the working class hero." I looked over at Greta, who, bore
a striking resemblance to Ingrid Bergman in "Casablanca." The cab
window was open and the wind blew yellow strands of hair across her
perfect profile. The empty buildings of early Soho whizzed behind her
like a terra-cotta abstract painting. Life seemed transcendent, and the
cab, a yellow flotation device. I looked over my shoulder at Abbie,
wondering why so many people bowed down to him, and wondering where
Stanley would have sat, had he come with us.
When we arrived at
the roof-top, I took out my camera and asked the others to pose. Abbie
freaked and grabbed the camera, demanding he take the pictures. I
thought it odd, but Greta and I dutifully faced the four directions and
I have the roll of pictures that Abbie took. They are stark and bright,
the background, hazy, kind of boring. At the end of the roll, still
wondering who this guy was, I took one last picture of Abbie without
him knowing: his shoes on the concrete roof of the World Trade Center.
XXXXX
Later,
when I was "told" it was Abbie Hoffman with the fake glasses, I
wondered what the Route One Brigade would have to say. It wasn't like I
was influenced by any other political group. I didn't hang out in
Berkeley or Ann Arbor and become a civil rights activist. I hung out in
Beverly Hills where my girlfriend married into the left coast mob. One
chapter went to the next. I always knew where Douglas was, he and Greta
knew each other from Santa Fe. But where was Gregory Dunkel, Richard
Fox and the others? Were they being wooed by celebrities? Or were they
eating alone at the counter at Big Boys?
After DC, twice I lived
in Baltimore, in apartments either with, or that I inherited from
Michael Stanley. (two years Baltimore, two years Boston, three years
Baltimore, then LA). The scene contrasted sharply with the West Coast
image, more like a Seinfeld sitcom meets an early John Waters movie. A
lot of ex-Klowntown residents visited those apartment as well as many
Maryland Institute folks who later moved to Hollywood. Lot of urban
pioneers. Alex Fraser lived in an old boat down in the Inner Harbor
when it was still an abandoned wharf. He shared the harbor with rats,
old tires and a fantastic industrial skyline dominated by the Domino
Sugar sign. At night he would walk up to the apartment on Mount Vernon
where it was warm and sit for hours in the bathtub. Douglas would send
poems from Santa Fe and Alex and I would take turns reading them out
loud. Sometimes Alex read them from the tub because there was a window
to the kitchen. It was a very small place. When I announced that I was
moving to California in 1981, Alex borrowed the poems, and refused to
return them again until after Douglas and I were married. He felt that
I should have always been with Douglas.
I met Huey Newton at
Jack Nicholson's house. Bert Schneider helped support Huey while he was
underground and found the boat and the pilot that sailed Huey to Cuba.
(It was one of my favorite
sit-around-the-kitchen-drinking-beers-on-a-Saturday-afetrnoon-stories,
to hear Schneider tell it.) When Bert and Greta got married I went out
to LA for a week to help Greta with the details, like finishing the new
swimming pool, getting enough wine up to the house and helping her
choose a wedding dress, a kind of Cato Cailin role. The night before
the wedding, Jack Nicholson held the bachelor and bachelorette party in
his living room, a spacious vault overlooked all of the San Fernando
Valley.
After all the stories I'd heard about Huey, it surprised
me that Huey was such a dandy, dressed to the nines. His suit was like
pale yellow silk, his tie, elegant and his complexion, radiant:
everything perfect. His wife was gorgeous. I remember everyone admired
her. She was Gracious Gwendolyn. They sat on a small sofa against a
crème colored wall. Above Huey's head was an enormous landscape of the
Southwest framed in a large gold frame; cowboys cooking dinner out on
the desert. It was a gorgeous painting, one of those moments in Old
Taos History that sends a jolt through me.
I don't remember what
Huey was talking about, but he always kept everyone enthralled with his
prolonged discourses. I didn't like the way people were fawning him,
and how he was holding court. I'd seen other people hold court, like
Studs Terkel. He would return a compliment with a piercing question.
And he loved the flirtations of gorgeous women. I went out dancing one
night with him and Lauren Hutton, the model with the gap in her two
front teeth. Studs was in his everyman phase and far more egalitarian
than Huey. I couldn't think of anything to say or ask and remember
wishing that someone had been there from the Route One Brigade with a
smart-ass question, like Alex Fraser, whom I knew would see me as soon
as I returned to Baltimore. Instead, I remember how well Huey's outfit
blended with the aesthetics of the painting behind him, how vast the
lights of the entire San Fernando Valley looked from the wall windows
and how perfectly golden sexy the two Academy awards looked at the top
of a large black bookcase.
Jack had a piece of Hap Sakwa's wood sculpture in his kitchen and Greta very proudly showed it to me.
Later,
in 1981, when I moved to Los Angeles, I became a volunteer at the
Odyssey Theater, a relationship that lasted ten years and rounded out
my theater education. (I still worked in the daytime as a Metro Rail
Engineer and had babies.) The Managing Director was Ron Sossi, the man
who wrote, directed and produced "The Chicago Conspiracy Trail."
CHICAGO CONSPIRACY TRIAL
Act One:
CLERK:
Will all please rise. (Enter JUDGE HOFFMAN) The United States District
Court for the Northern District of Illinois is now in session. The
honorable Julius J. Hoffamn, presiding. Please be seated. No. 69 CR 180
United States of America versus David T. Dellinger et al. Case on trial.
MR.
SHULTZ: Ladies and gentlemen of the jury, Mr. Foran, counsel for the
defendants. The government will prove that each of the eight defendants
in this case conspired together to encourage people to riot during the
Democratic National Convention which was held in Chicago from August 26
through August 29, 1968. We will prove, that the defendant, David
Dellinger, who sits right there, and the defendant, Rennard Davis, who
sits next to him, and Thomas Hayden who is standing, that these three
men·
COURT: Who is the last defendant you named?
SCHULTZ: Mr. Hayden.
COURT: The one who shook his fist in the direction of the jury?
HAYDEN: That is my customary greeting, Your Honor.
COURT: It may be your customary greeting, but we do not allow shaking of fists in this courtroom.
HAYDEN: It implied no disrespect for the jury; it is my customary greeting.
COURT:
Regardless of what it implies, sir, there will be no fist shaking and I
caution you not to repeat it. That applies to all the defendants, Mr.
Schultz.
SCHULTZ: In promoting and encouraging this riot, the
three men whom I just mentioned used an organization which they called
the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam to plan
these activities. Two of these defendants, Abbie Hoffman who sits÷who
is just standing for you, ladies and gentlemen··
COURT: The jury
is directed to disregard the kiss thrown by the defendant Hoffman and
the defendant is directed not to do that sort of thing again.
SCHULTZ:·.and with them a man named Jerry Rubin who is standing there---these two men called themselves leaders of the Yippies.
HOFFMAN AND RUBIN: Yippie!
I
met my former husband in Los Angeles. We married, had two children and
got divorced. That did not take very long. He still works in television
and lives in Phoenix.
I worked as a Metro Engineer for twenty
years: DC, Baltimore, Boston and LA. In Los Angeles, things got messy,
engineering-wise and I became a whistle blower. I had been encouraged
to speak out through Greta's crowd, particularly via Bob Rafelson, who
was a staunch supporter, but, more importantly, back to the nuns and my
high school experience, which helped me choose the road less traveled.
Co-incidentally, I was getting divorced. Then suddenly, overnight, we
had the riots; my house was in the city, right in the center of the
action. So during ten days in May 1992, I lost my career, my marriage,
and my neighborhood. Then things went downhill and kept going in that
direction for ten years. I encountered long-term unemployment, single
motherhood, relocation (4X's since then), abusive relationships,
long-term childhood illnesses, bankruptcy, lawsuits, apartment fire,
& eviction. Life was like a very bad soap opera. I remember one
night, just after Erika had been released from the hospital for the
third time in a year, I was dressed in my waitress uniform and I got
down on my knees by the side of my bed and prayed for a miracle. That
was the night the apartment building caught on fire. And I was hoping
that God would have made me Queen for the Day.
There were some
long nights sitting at the Big Boy's counter with two mouths to feed
and not able being able to afford it. I became increasingly depressed.
I felt that I had made all the right choices for building a better
society but to what avail? Plus, as a clotheshorse, I was looking
pretty ragged. My flirtatious mode had dried up. Somehow, in taking the
road less traveled, I couldn't see where I was going.
But there
was a strong candle of friendship burning amid the darkness and I had
some of the greatest, wildest, single mother friends and they provided
a rich golden tapestry to our lives. Raising our kids tribal fashion,
we might find ourselves bedding down under rugs at a new age vortex in
New Mexico or at the hot springs made famous in "Easy Rider." We were
all broke and let our children cover themselves in mud and run through
old orchards with dogs and horses. Erika, my youngest, thrived under
these conditions, as she is the naturalist among us.
When I
lived in an apartment in Chicago, there was a nice house for sale for
sale in the neighborhood. I told my girls, grades 2 and 4 at the time:
"I can sell the house in California and work a full time job, and we
could buy that house. But then I would only have two weeks of vacation
a year, and we would have a housekeeper live with us."
Zinta, my
oldest, stamped her foot on the sidewalk and said, "I would rather live
in a trailer and have adventures than live a life like that."
And I thought, "Well there goes trying to keep up with the Jones'."
After
some time my life began to turn around. My oldest daughter Zinta
started modeling in Chicago and has since worked in Europe and Japan
and lives in Los Angeles and New York. Although she is not making
enough money to survive on her own, there are many friends around the
globe that help her along the way.
My next reunion with Douglas
was deep in a State Forrest, down a long, badly rutted dirt road
outside Cadillac, Michigan, in August 2001. I was a cook for Zinta's
Latvian Scout Camp. We had been living in Chicago for nearly seven
years. Douglas had also been living near the shores of Lake Michigan
for three years, only up north with his dad. Our repeated attempts at
seeing one another had failed, since Chicago is an eight-hour drive
from Petoskey.
I knew that Douglas, too, had suffered emotional
set-backs, grave illnesses and hard times, but that knowledge left me
unprepared for what happened the moment I turned around from the camp
fire with a large metal skillet in my hand. He walked into the fire
circle and it was like being hit by a Stealth Bomber; my knees quaked,
I looked at him for one second and wanted to fall down on the ground. I
was completely smitten. Douglas had been a modern dancer in Seattle for
17 years and to stay in shape, to dance at his age, he had to train in
the gym. Just three years prior, he had cut off his waist long dread
locks. Gone was the dark curly hair. Now he had short, military style,
salt and pepper bristles.
We spent the evening with the scouts,
who had decorated the primitive campground with ferns and birch bark
decorations. They baked special rye bread, black peas and had fermented
a soft cheese for the closing night of the camp. Many had attended the
Latvian language school in Kalamazoo for the summer and young men and
women together, would break into six part harmonies of ancient folk
songs. I had learned the rudiments of the language from my prior
marriage, but Douglas said it was like suddenly slipping back into the
1920's. There was a large bonfire by the side of the lake, and then
later more songs and skits.
Douglas and I talked for a few hours
and then went to our separate tents. The next day we broke camp and
traveled down state to visit a friend who lived on Lake Michigan. On
the beach that next day, almost as soon as we sat down, less that 24
hours since we had re-met, we decided to get married. I agreed to move
to his town, and live in the house with his dad, never having met his
dad, seen the house or been to the town. I had lots of friends who had
tons of regrets. I had listened to them gripe and moan about losing
careers, opportunities, relationships, making fools of themselves, but
my only regret was that I was not able to have a relationship with
Douglas. Right there on the beach, I turned my life on a dime.
A
year later, without much of an opportunity to see each other (he took
care of his dad and worked during the week, and I took care of my
children and worked on the weekends), I moved up north and we wed
almost immediately. Douglas had been a bachelor his whole life, so he
had a few male dominance issues I had to learn to deal with that were
similar to dealing with my male cat. Luckily, I had been reviewing
these issues with Dusty for about ten years, and learned to see things
his way, most of the time. I had no problem changing my name to "Mrs.
Douglas E. MacAdams." The irony! He was the one who sent me to the
women's lib meetings! After being a woman of independent nature for
fifty years, I became a mail order bride!
But Douglas says he
was always waiting for me, so he made room in his small bedroom for all
my paraphernalia, which is one of my issues. My oldest daughter moved
to Los Angeles at 16 and I no longer see her very often, but she was a
headstrong girl from a very early age and I spend a lot of time
managing her career via Internet. I've learned tricks of the trade from
single mom comrades who live in backwoods Slovakia and have been using
the Internet for years to aid in their daughter's modeling careers.
Hooray globilization! My younger daughter, Erika, fits right into the
high school, and has made it to the Varsity Soccer team. Instead of
being one of the "Women who run with the Wolves," I am now a soccer
mom, and proud of it. Douglas' dad was shot down during WWII and was in
a prisoner of war camp where the "Great Escape" occurred. He is a
gentleman and a scholar, and reminds me of the actor who introduces
Masterpiece theater, the have similar baritones and vocabulary.
Last
year I started substitute teaching at the local High School. One day,
it was Modern American History. I scanned the open textbook and got a
bolt of shock. This class of 16 year olds was studying civil rights,
the large anti-war demonstrations in DC, the first commune in New
Mexico and Woodstock! Huey Newton! Abbie Hoffman! The nightly news
reports of our tumultuous past were now part of the history books for
school children in Northern Michigan. The students were turning in term
papers on the Iran/Contra Affair and Ollie North. Some of them had
excuses or had to run to the library to print their essays. I was
dumbfounded. Somehow it never got through to me, that we were right. I
had suffered so much from my decision to be a whistle blower and the
resulting bankruptcy and that I missed that really important point.
Nixon went down in the history book as a crook, and Spiro Agnew? How
did he go down in this Modern American History book FOR CHILDREN?
There's one TV photo with ONE quote: "Niggling nabobs of negativity."
Whoozhhh
went the water down the steps at Klowntown, and there was John Clarke's
voice bellowing obscenities at the Television. Feeling the effects of
the onset of the golden years, or possibly from inhaling too much CO2
these days (no matter where you live on the planet) my mind jumped to a
parallel universe which used to be called daydreaming. A memory came
back: the clanking of the beer bottles, the sudsy water cascading down
the steps, having to take a pee in a small bathroom while another
comrade took a shower, a thin piece of plastic separating us.
"My term paper, can I turn it in tomorrow?"
"Huh?"
"My paper on Ollie North, can I turn it in tomorrow?"
Ollie North, land a' Goshen. What truth did I miss?
From
Dr. Hunter S. Thompson: "1972 was the year I first met John Kerry, at a
riot on that elegant little street in front of the White House. He was
yelling into a bullhorn and I was trying to throw a dead bleeding rat
onto the president's lawn··..We were angry and righteous in those days,
and there were millions of us. We kicked two chief executives out of
the White House because they were stupid warmongers. ·Wise people said
that was impossible, but so what? It was fun. We were warriors then,
and our tribe was strong, like a river. That river is still running."
From "The Fun Hogs in the Passing Lane" Rolling Stone November 11th,
2004.
What about the street education from the Route One
Brigade? Four years ago, still seeking that connection, I bought a copy
of "Fugitive Days", by Bill Ayers. From the book jacket: "Ayers begins
with his education as a rebel, his increasing sense of horror at the
American involvement in Viet Nam. He takes us to the Days of Rage, SDS,
the Black Panthers, and deep into the weather Underground. At the
center of the book is a terrible explosion, Diane Oughton is killed and
Ayers becomes a fugitive." Ayers is now a distinguished Professor of
Education at the University of Chicago and is married to Bernadette
Dohrm.
"This is a precious book·..because it re-creates a
critical point of view and way of thinking that we seem, even a few
decades later, barely able to recall." S. Turow
"A memoir that
is, in effect, a deeply moving elegy to all those young dreamers who
tried to live decently in an indecent world. Ayers provides a tribute
to those better angels of ourselves." Studs Turkel
During the
class on Modern American History, I found out that being arrested for
an anti-war demonstration and receiving a GO TO JAIL card gets you out
of jail free now in the eyes of many of the High Schoolers. (They wear
shirts that say the DOORS and LED ZEPPLIN. If you have been to
Woodstock, then you are a living god.) They were shocked when I showed
an old Viet Nam War documentary and pointed to a demonstration and
said, "I was there."
"You're lying!"
"Douglas was arrested during one of the demonstrations."
"No way!" (Douglas, as the only male librarian in a small town, is known by many.)
Douglas's
first arrest was at the Skinner building. The second was on the day of
the Justice Department demonstrations, and as he likes to point out,
the largest single day of arrest in the history of the world. He was
moving away from the Justice building to block another major
intersection when he was thrown into central lock-up and kept there
overnight.
Douglas's views and mannerisms have not changed one
iota. In the morning, as the sun comes up over Lake Walloon, he drinks
his coffee slowly and watches CNN. Alone in the room, he will suddenly
burst into his characteristic laughter at the irony spoken over the
airwaves that many Americans probably swallow with their coffee and
think its truth. I've asked him to write an essay every time he nails
down a good argument at the dinner table, but he hasn't started yet.
Poor Erika, she had no idea what I was getting her into. Yet she's a
smart kid, and selected "War and Peace," to read on her own this
winter. I found her an old copy on the bookshelf. It belonged to
Douglas's mother.
Douglas spent the last four years on the Board
of Directors of the Natural Food Coop. The last two years he was
President while they finally moved from their old hippie headquarters
to a brand new building on Main Street. First time there had been a
grocery store in town in nearly thirty years. It was an enormous
diplomatic duty that he performed free of charge.
When Bush
declared war in Iraq, the family was home in front of the fire. Erika
and I sat on the rug as the men watched television. Erika was working
on a large board for a school project: the seven layers of costumes
that a woman wore in a Shakespeare play. I understood the mechanics of
it very well from having worked at the Odyssey Theater in Los Angeles,
and we laid out detailed sketches as Bush gave his speech. I asked the
men a simple question. What war was being fought in England during the
time of Shakespeare? Could they name it of the top of their heads? I
knew what clothes women were wearing, as did my daughter, down to the
minute detail of the undergarments. Do you know?
So I ask you,
what is more important? War or Fashion? OK, that's a trick Platonistic
question. My answer? Well I jockeyed a passion for fashion into a job
as a costume designer, and now I help other people look good. I've
worked on six major shows this year, and enjoyed every minute of
frustration. Politics is fashion, fashion is political. The only way I
can end the war is to come to some kind of peace with myself.
The
best lesson I learned from all this? It doesn't matter how rich,
powerful or famous you are, if you are a jerk, people will remember for
being a jerk. The richest and most powerful people in the world look up
to the ones who are the most gracious. What I learned from meeting Huey
Newton, was to be more like his wife, Gracious Gwendolyn. Granted, I am
not a saint, even though I tell my family that I am one almost daily,
nor am I as diplomatic as I should be at my age, the blockheads still
infuriate me, but at least I comprehend that the truth always wins in
the end.
Kumbaya, Work for Peace, Happy Anniversary!
Mrs. Douglas Elek MacAdams (Mrs. Cheeze)
Critics
rave; "The Cheeze packed thirty five years of political baggage into a
five pound bag. Someone must have raised her consciousness along the
way."
"Karat, you've got legs, boobs and brains, and that's a rare combination in this town." ---Bert Schneider
"He
who makes war his profession cannot be otherwise than vicious. War
makes men thieves and peace brings them to the gallows." ----Machiavelli

The Klownhouse Klown on the roof as drawn by Jim Risdo
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