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CRASH        Your guide to travel thru the underground        May 1992

                  ALTERNATIVE TRAVEL METHODS ISSUE


---------
GREETINGS
from the Crash Crew

When I was 18, and planning my first solo cross-country driving trip, 
I went to a travel agent and said, "I'm driving from San Francisco to 
Washington, DC. Can you give me some maps?" She asked, "Do you want to 
go the southern way, the central way, or the northern way?" "Uh... 
southern, I guess," I replied; I had always wanted to explore the 
American deep south. When she returned, she carried a tiny flip-book 
map she called a "Trip-Tik." It showed Interstate 40 (one of the main 
freeways traversing the United States), and the towns and side roads 
on 10 miles of each side of the freeway. I knew better then to trust 
my travels to this Reader's Digest caricature of a map, and chose to 
avoid as best I could all freeways on that trip.

All too commonly, we are provided with only enough information to 
choose between the "accepted" forms of travel --?major freeways, 
rushed plane flights, and crowded and confining buses and trains. Not 
only are these forms of travel expensive (both financially and 
ecologically), they are often dull and alienating.

In this issue we give you a start on finding other modes of travel 
that are usually cheaper, often more socially stimulating, and a whole 
lot more fun.


--------------------------------------------
LETTERS * LETTRES * TA GA MI * POSTE * CARTA

Dear Crash Network,
Thanks for the fanzine. Sorry about the length of time in replying. 
We've been kind of busy organizing travel. Splinter stopped in 
February -- as 2 of us have decided to see some of the world. I've 
passed your 'zine onto another good fanzine in New Plymouth. New 
Zealand is a really good deal for Americans travelling now, because 
our exchange rate is bad, i.e. US 54 cents for NZ $1. The South Island 
is for the type of traveller into the outdoors, and its beautiful 
scenery. Auckland is the largest city -- 1 million approx. It has 
heaps of hostels ranging in price from NZ$12-19. There are 6 in the 
central city -- all of which are clean and well run. Entertainment 
only really starts Thur-Sat. --?but there is a variety. There are also 
2 hostels in Ponsonby (inner suburb) which is where I live --?they are 
pretty good too. Anyhow thanx again. Good luck.
    Splinter (New Zealand)

hello there, my name is max & i'm about to escape from the suburban 
existentialist prison, sell all my worldly belongings and go high-
plains driftin' over the dark fields of Amerika w/ nothing but a dawg 
and a spare pare of socks. no car, no home, no credit cards. it's kind 
of scary to be out there w/o a pot to piss in, so when i saw yr. ad in 
neil cunningham's Flower chapbook i thought you might be able to help 
me out. yes, i would like to meet fellow travellers, find alternative 
destinations, and experience different cultures. i'm bound for 
california one way or the other, but maybe you can make it easier for 
me. thanks a bundle.
    tex max (USA)


------
DEBRIS
Networking and information


Edutainment at its best. Issue #3 had "McThief the Crime Cat" showing 
us successful shoplifting, articles on "eco-terrorists," "Anarchist 
Olympics," and lots of other wild creativity. Great. Send a donation 
to: L.W.O.D., PO Box 329, Santa Cruz, CA 95061, USA.


Hundreds of exciting environmental trips in Africa, Australia, India, 
Alaska and more. $25 postpaid from Blue Penguin, 3031 Fifth St., 
Boulder, CO 80304, USA. FREE LEAFLET (800) 800-8147.


see, learn about and enjoy this large continent (3 times the size of 
the U.S.). We journey through cultures, history, landscapes, cuisines 
and life-styles, close enough to touch them. Whether your interests 
are politics or architecture, religion or music, botany or world 
cuisine, community health or economic development, there are rich 
rewards. For more information write to: International Bicycle Fund, 
4887 Columbia Drive South, Seattle, WA 98108-1919, USA.


will be having their third Bike Tour starting June 12th in Freiburg, 
Germany (departing right after the Freiburg Youth Festival), and 
ending 53 days and 40 cities later in Bulgaria on August 2nd. At the 
end of this tour, which is done to bring attention to ecological and 
social problems of Eastern Europe, EYFA will be holding their annual 
Ecotopia gathering. This event is a great chance to learn about living 
in harmony with the environment and with each other. For more 
information on the bike tour contact the international coordinator: 
Katarina Matejcikova, STROM ZIVOTA (Tree of Life), Prazska 11, 811 04 
Bratislava, Czechoslovakia. For more info about EYFA and Ecotopia, 
contact: Green Tree News, Postbus 566, 6130 AN Sittard, Netherlands.


tell you the advantages of bicycles, hiking, canoeing and other 
methods of self-propelled travel. The issue we received had an article 
on 3 people who biked from Canada to Chile! Packed with info and very 
inspiring. Send $3 for sample to: Kokopelli Notes, PO Box 8186, 
Asheville, NC 28814, USA.


Information on living in portable dwellings. Articles on prevention of 
bear attacks, stories on teepee, yurt and treehouse living, wild 
edible foraging, solar showers and much more! Sample $1.


U.S. Free with membership in The American Youth Hostels or $5. AYH, 
724 9th St. N.W., POB 37613, Washington D.C. 20013-7613, USA.


international travel & info. zine for alternative nudist/nakist/ 
naturist lifestyles...While concentrating on nudity and the 
restrictions of such...N.P.T.G. also reports sexual customs and 
attitudes in many countries; plus general travel tips, etc." There 
will also soon be zines for East and West Asia and Caribia and Latin 
America from these guys. For a leaflet of more info. send a SASE to: 
Nudist Travel, POB 8714, La Jolla, CA 92038, USA.


join ETBD tours or to buy their books, videos, etc. They organize some 
great tours but the short articles here will appeal to you even if you 
only travel to Europe by reading about it in the bathroom. #31 
includes a Venetion Pub Crawl diary, Vespa scooters on Greek islands, 
Gypsy thieves, European toilet trauma, up-to-date train fares, and 
more. Send a buck or two to Europe Through the Backdoor, Inc., 109 4th 
Avenue, North Edmonds, WA 98020.


-------------------------------------------
GREEN TORTOISE...LEISURELY ADVENTURE TRAVEL
by Miles Poindexter

I haven't traveled on the Green Tortoise bus lines yet. But I've heard 
so many good things about them that I called the company and asked for 
some literature. They sent me no less than 14 articles praising this 
unique service. So I sat down and started reading and you would just 
not believe the stuff that goes on in these buses, right now no less 
in this new age of Puritanicalism!

I read confessions of skeptical travelers who became converted 
adventurers almost over night. Here was a typical description of a 
Green Tortoise Journey: Initially the writer would get on the bus and 
wonder at the complete absence of seats. Instead there are platforms 
covered by foam padding. At night even more platforms are unfolded and 
the bus becomes a giant bed for everyone. Pretty outrageous so far, 
eh? Sleeping right next to someone you never even saw before! Jesse 
Helms would shit. Then there's the curious sign on the bus that says 
"No Smoking Tobacco." Sounds strangely substance-specific to me. Does 
that mean smoking other things is...well...? Who knows. Try it. 
Anyway, gradually everyone on the bus gets to know each other. What 
with all the stops making it such a long trip. There's plenty of time 
for friendships to form. This is usually the point in all these 
articles where the beauty of Green Tortoise begins to seep in. It's a 
Leisurely trip, because half of the fun is the journey itself! There's 
all kinds of stops for swimming (clothes optional) in natural hot 
springs, getting food and alcohol, going to the bathroom (there are no 
bathrooms on board), and of course preparing and eating meals. Did I 
say preparing? You see, part of your fare goes towards food that is 
stored on the bus. For most of the trip, the driver will stop for 
breakfast and dinner. Usually the sight will be a park, Indian 
Reservation, beach, anything but a but depot! All the passengers pile 
out and help in the preparation of the meal. These are usually 
vegetarian since meat goes bad easily and many passengers don't eat 
it. After the meal and clean-up, there's some sort of outdoor 
adventures at hand, such as hiking, bathing, rafting, etc. Some nights 
the bus stays put and everyone rolls out their sleeping bag and falls 
into slumber under the stars.

After a few nights like this the travelers start to get to know each 
other. Many are from Europe and Australia, many are young and during 
the summer there are many students from all over the world. There is 
always a generous exchange of addresses, information and opinions 
towards the middle of these trips. And great musical educations since 
many passenger bring their tapes for the bus's stereo system as well 
as instruments. That's a slim outline of your typical Green Tortoise 
experience. I was hooked so I inquired how this company had started. 
So to finish this article I'll leave you with a brief history of GT 
and their address in case you got guts to try it.

Green Tortoise was founded in 1974 in San Francisco by Gardner Kent. 
His buses offered something you couldn't get on a plane, hands-on 
interaction with the scenery. Today GT has 10 buses and offers trips 
everywhere from Alaska to New Orleans as well as Canada and Mexico. 
Their San Francisco to Boston is still their most popular route. This 
bus company has been going strong right through the decline of 
Greyhound and the demise of Trailways. To me that means they're on to 
something. Contact: Green Tortoise Adventure Travel, PO Box 24459, 
1667 Jerrold St., San Francisco, CA 94124, USA.


-----------------------
AIRHITCH: MYTH OR FACT?
by Miles Poindexter

OK, the first time I saw an Airhitch ad in some paper in New York 
City, I figured it was a total scam. I mean, c'mon, New York to Europe 
for $160? They must put them in the luggage compartment or something. 
Unfortunately for me, I never even called to get more information 
about them, it was too unbelievable. Don't let this happen to you! 
Airhitch is a great opportunity if you're a flexible traveler. First 
of all, you don't travel in the luggage compartment. In fact, you are 
allowed the same amount of baggage of any other passenger on the 
plane. Once you are on the airplane you are treated like any other 
passenger, the only difference is your method of access to the 
aircraft.

You must be flexible on 3 things in order to fly Airhitch; your date 
and time of departure, your destination and departure city, and your 
return flight.

The reason for this lies in how Airhitch works. It is NOT an airline, 
a travel agency, a tour operator, or a charter operator. It is NOT a 
means of flying directly between point A and point B. The way it works 
is that you register any time you want and tell them what US cities 
you could depart from, your first 3 choices of destination cities in 
Europe, and a period of 5 or more days in a row that you are available 
for departure. A deposit is also necessary when you register. The 
farther away your chosen departure days are from your registration, 
the better chance you have of getting your first choice of 
destination, but this is not guaranteed. Airhitch will then tell you 
what flights are likely to be available during your "date range." At 
this point you must pick one of your flight opportunities and then 
Airhitch will give you all the information you need about how to get 
on it. Over 95% of people manage to fly to Europe during their date 
range; pretty successful for something this cheap. And you're entitled 
to a full refund if Airhitch was unable to find at least one flight 
for you. 

Now some bad news. There is no such thing as a round trip with these 
guys. They can book a another flight back to the US but these two 
flights are completely unrelated. Problems with one will not affect 
the other. Some people arrange both flights at the same time, others 
wait until they are in Europe before going thru the Airhitch process 
again in the other direction. It's up to you. The other negative point 
is that it is not wise to reject a flight Airhitch finds for you, even 
if it is not to one of the cities in Europe you chose. This will cause 
you to lose your deposit and your name will be put to the back of the 
waiting list, making it more difficult to get another flight. On the 
other hand 80% of the flights they choose go within a 300 mile radius 
of Brussels, Belgium, so you'll get pretty close to your destination 
in any case.

As you can see the key is to be flexible. The system is ideal for 
students and in fact it was started by students. But anyone can use 
it. It is comparable to hitching a ride on the side of the highway 
(only a lot safer!), If you want to get to Boston from Miami and 
someone offers to take you with them to New York, you're not going to 
turn it down are you? 

Anyway, it's a good idea and I hope some other similar operations 
start up soon for other parts of the world. For info. write to 
Airhitch, 2790 Broadway, Suite 100, New York, NY 10025, USA. Happy 
hitching!


--------------------------------------------
WHEN I HEAR THAT OLE TRAIN WHISTLE A BLOWIN'
by Lee

You know, it's a funny thing most usually when the subject of hoboing 
comes up which is a hobby of mine and I generally like to spread the 
word around, someone invariably says, "Gawd, didn't that go out in the 
'30's and whammo, aren't there big suckers out there that wanna take 
your head off?" Well, I might say "hmmmm..." to the first part and I 
know where they got that second stereotype: from Yul Brunner or some 
such as the Bull in "King of the North" with Paul Newman as the King 
Hobo and all that..."Wheesh" is what I say. Don't make a mistake, the 
Bulls (railroad police) were bad then -- I've read of attempted murder 
on the rails and I know a fellow who spent some time on a chain gang 
in Georgia in the '40's for hopping freights...but ridin' the rails in 
the '90's is the coolest thing, I highly recommend it! Now just watch, 
the first time you hop you'll get killed and you'll think what idiot 
advice is this but here's whatz up with this boy: I've never gone to 
jail or received a ticket in 20 or 30 encounters with bulls and in 
thirty-five thousand miles have had the gas of a lifetime. Ridin' the 
rails is one of the more consistently adventurous things one can do, 
it's one of those truly American things like having sex in cars or 
Jazz, etc. and it's scenic and free, free, free!

Hey, here's something Jack Kerouac says about thumbing: "...one of the 
biggest troubles hitch-hiking is having to talk to innumerable people, 
making them feel that they didn't make a mistake picking you up, even 
entertaining them almost, all of which is a great strain when you're 
going all the way and don't plan to sleep in hotels." So, I can see 
you're convinced about the wisdom of the rails, O.K., here's whatz up, 
how to do it:

First, try and get some maps of how the freight lines work and what 
companies (Southern Pacific, Burlington Northern, Santa Fe, etc.) go 
where but if you can't don't worry about it, it's pretty obvious -- 
freights go through all the cities and gobs of smaller towns and gobs 
of wilderness areas.

Second: go down to the nearest freight yard and ask the workers about 
it. Say, "Hey, where's the best place to catch a northbound, 
eastbound, southbound, or westbound to so and so and when's the next 
one?" Inquire about "hot shots" and catch them if you can cuz they're 
the fastest. The secret is ask, ask, and ask around and don't be blown 
if you get bum info and miss a train or whatever.

There's a thousand little things you pick up with experience that 
helpz a lot and after stomping around some yards you'll get the hang 
of it. Night time is best for avoiding the Bull, day time is alright, 
stay low and if the Bull stops you -- be straight and friendly, show 
your ID. Often as not she or he will be friendly, maybe even helpful. 
In any case they will usually say something vague like, "Did you know 
riding trains is illegal? And I'd like to not see you again." 
Translation: hang low and hide a bit better.

About getting on: it's preferable to get on before the train moves out 
but as often as not you'll have to catch it "on the fly," which is 
pretty difficult if you're carrying a pack. Boxcars are darn difficult 
and dangerous to catch on the move. Grain cars, piggybacks, gondolas 
are much easier cuz of ladders that are just a big step from the 
ground. Look way ahead, make sure you won't stumble on anything while 
running alongside, concentrate, match your speed, focus on that moment 
-- this is part of the zen of hopping -- and boom, you're on. There's 
a technique to it, be careful -- safety first! As they say. 
Well...there's a lot to know I guess but it's also just an intuitive 
fun activity that gets you around, know what I mean jellybean? So, 
here's some safety shit to know: When you move around always hang on 
and don't hang out too close to the doors of boxcars -- trains jerk a 
lot. For that same reason always jam a spike or a piece of wood in the 
sliding track so the door won't slam shut. Never ever stand in between 
the cars, one can become moosh real quick. Always look both ways 
before crossing tracks, in yards especially as single cars can be 
moving around sometimes very silently. When possible sleep sideways 
near a front wall or with your feet towards the front of the train in 
case of a derailment (they're fairly rare) which causes the whole 
fucking thing to come screeching to a halt in which case you're still 
going 50 mph...eek! Keep your head and have a gas and a half and I 
don't want to hear it if you get smooshed cuz I'm not advising you to 
go out and do illegal dangerous things, blah, blah, blah...

Fun stuff: At railroad crossings be sure and wave to all the people 
going by (actually you're going by, they're sitting still). Hang-out 
and talk with hobos and farm laborers; there's some good people there, 
also a few bad eggs I suppose. When there's nasty weather or going to 
be, try and catch a ride in a locomotive or caboose -- ask the 
engineer or caboose people first -- I swear your first ride on "the 
power" (locomotives) will be a ride to remember! Freights can be fast 
but often slow too. Patience is the name of the game -- more than 
likely on any given trip you'll do a day or two of just waiting around 
in yards so bring some good books and relax -- there's one comin' 
around the bend with your name on it. Women might want to take an old 
pee can; peeing ain't easy on a jiggling train. Make sure you've got 
some peanut butter and banana sandwiches and plenty of water and a 
warm sleeping bag and Gawd damn leave the driving up to them!


----------------------
AN AFTERNOON IN MONACO
by Ann Rusnak

How small is Monaco? I walked from the train station to the palace, 
the farmer's market and the harbor. If it hadn't been to tropically 
hot I would have walked to the casino as well.

I knew it would be hot. I was attending adult classes in French at 
Ecole Actilangue in Nice during July. This school cost half what I had 
paid two years earlier to study French in Quebec, Canada. I liked this 
school.

Saturday morning I took a plastic bottle of ice from the freezer and 
packed it in my purse along with sunglasses and a wad of French 
francs. I was a lot more carefree than the teenagers over whom I 
stepped to enter the train station at Nice. These kids, probable 
Germans and Americans, were dozing or playing cards in sleeping bags 
laid edge to edge on the sidewalk surrounding the station. 

The railroad runs high above the gentle Mediterranean waves. Many 
tunnels cut thru ridges to the sea. It seemed I spent a third of the 
half-hour voyage in the dark. Train stations along the route were all 
overrun with teenagers in shorts or other casual attire. Everyone 
glowed in the heat.

No customs, no immigration, no money changing at the crowded Monaco 
train station. However, the mailbox that I passed, heading seaward, 
noted that all mail deposited therein must bear stamps of Monaco!

The royal palace crowns a plateau licked by small ocean waves. An 
earlier Grimaldi once ordered the citadel's base scraped of loose rock 
to discourage armed assault. Now, in the reign of Prince Rainier, 
signs and arcades lead tourists up stairways to the castle and 
souvenir shops. A palace guard in white shirt, white cotton pants and 
topee paces a 30-foot path, back and forth. A linen marquee guides 
visitors to a ticket office for the palace tour in French or English.

I liked the tour. It went thru a dozen rooms filled to suffocation 
with wealth, antiques, and red plush wallpaper. Amid many ancient 
family portraits were two modern compositions with Grace Kelly, former 
actress, former wife to Rainier. I thought both pictures were 
commercial-looking, more like magazine art, compared to the older 
folks in perukes and lace. On the other hand, "Napoleon meets the 
Pope" manifested plainly an artist's trick. He painted the upstart on 
a higher footing than the Pope in order to imply that he was winning 
an argument.

In an open-air passage, a grotto of stalactites had been screened and 
filled with turquoise and chartreuse parakeets. They flitted and 
squawked. One budgie had somehow escaped thru the wire. Now he 
wandered the screens as lost and lonely as Jack Kerouac, trying to 
find his way back into the cage.

Formal gardens and the aquarium were nearby; but I needed to sit. I 
chose a bench from which I could sketch an outdated guardhouse of 
stone. Six classmates from Ecole Actilangue happened by. They sat down 
and sweated beside me for a while. We all got out our bottles of ice, 
now melting nicely, and sipped. We agreed that Monaco -- spread 
against a mountain before us -- looked just like scenic views of Hong 
Kong. It is a dense patch of high-rise buildings climbing a steep 
mountain. Monaco has no beaches, just a rocky cove filled with 
gleaming white yachts.


--------------------------
CODE OF RESPONSIBLE TRAVEL
excerpted from *IBF News* (see "Debris")

Tourism can promote national and international understanding and 
economic development, or it can destroy cultures and environments. The 
challenge is to create an activity that benefits both the host and 
guest and hurts neither, that respects and protects the natural and 
human environment, and that leaves decision making about development 
to the indigenous people who are most directly affected.

TRAVEL TO MEET NOT CONQUER -- Understand your reasons for traveling. 
Pick destinations that you care about. Travel to meet the world and 
for the experience that brings, not to "conquer it." Travel in a 
spirit of humility and with a genuine desire to meet and share with 
local people, and appreciate their dignity. Rather than: counting 
rolls of film shot, calculating miles traveled, blasting through 
villages to reach mountains, racing along the coast to "discover" a 
beach paradise, rushing to collect entries in your passport or 
accumulating other items of travel materialism -- take the time to 
discover the enrichment that comes from seeing another way of life in 
its fullness. Be sensitive that what enriches you may rob or violate 
others. Select activities that celebrate and preserve the diversity of 
the world. Reflect daily on your experiences: seek to deepen your 
understanding.


and beliefs of other people, thus preventing what might be offensive 
behavior. Remember this especially concerning dress, photography and 
religion. Realize that people in the area you visit often have time 
concepts and thought patterns different from your own. Not inferior, 
just different. Don't wear sacred items or buy unique artifacts 
central to the culture. Don't patronize tourism projects or activities 
that undermine the local culture, value system, or ecology.


superficial aspects of places you've been. Ask how the community is 
getting along within itself. How are the people interacting with their 
family and friends and their environment? Learn to observe, think, 
speak and write in a language that is non-ethnocentric, non-racist, 
non-pejorative and non-sensationalizing. Cultivate the habit of 
listening and observing, rather than merely hearing and seeing. Make a 
habit of asking questions instead of knowing all of the answers.


barriers between you and the place you came to experience. Take 
advantage of opportunities to walk, bicycle and use other available 
forms of non-motorized transport. Consider using these as your primary 
means of travel. Only bring necessary technological gadgetry. Don't 
let gadgets get between you and the natural ways of your destination.


community's economy: use services and stay in lodgings that are owned 
by a member of the community, and that use and serve locally produced 
goods. If food and beverages are sufficiently available, purchase your 
needs from locally produced items. If food is scarce don't compete! 
Travel someplace else or be self-sufficient in your dietary needs. 
When buying, remember that the bargains you obtain are only possible 
because of low wages paid to the producer. Recognize that in most 
areas, spending on motorized transportation only minimally benefits 
the local economy because the equipment and energy is imported. Be 
satisfied with the comforts that the local economy can provide. If you 
need all the comfort of home, why travel?

For more info on responsible travel and economic development contact: 
Ecumenical Coalition On Third World Tourism, Box 24, Chorakhebua, 
Bangkok 10230, THAILAND, or Center for Responsible Tourism, 2 
Kensington Road, San Antonio, CA 94960 USA.


-----------
MILES TO GO
The Myth of Settling Down
by Miles Poindexter

A girlfriend of mine said "I like to travel and stuff but deep down 
I'm looking for that special guy who will say 'Stacy -- it's time for 
us to hitch up and settle down.'" Why is there a feeling inside so 
many of us that eventually we should "settle down?" Do we really 
understand what the term means?

Most likely the term came from the western expansion days of early 
North America. People would head into the wilderness in those days 
until they found a spot they liked, then they would create a 
settlement.

Nowadays it's come to mean much more. Settling down can involve 
falling in love and getting married, having children, joining the 
community you've settled in as a neighbor, and in the U.S.A. it can 
mean changing to become more acceptable to your neighbors, becoming 
less "crazy," more responsible, sensible, etc.

If we look at the flipside of this term, then a person who has not 
settled down is an outcast. We are looked upon as "young-uns" sowing 
our wild oats, running around the world having fun and being carefree. 
Even people who travel in order to help people in other countries with 
environmental or social problems are commonly considered to be just 
going through some idealistic phase of youth. The smug assumption 
seems to be that when we finally grow up, we'll forget these silly 
world issues and worry about real problems like buying a house, car, 
having kids, and picking a nice church to join.

But let us go back to the idea of where the term "settling down" came 
from, and how it has changed today. People formed settlements long ago 
because strength lay in numbers. The wilderness was dangerous and we 
needed the protection of our neighbors and a well fortified 
settlement. No one thought that they were living on land that other 
people had been living on for hundreds of years. They didn't think 
that if they had just asked these natives to share the land, maybe 
they wouldn't need a fortified settlement because there would be no 
need for fighting. They just took it. So the history of the phrase 
"settling down" is a bloody one filled with prejudice.

And today, have things changed so much? If you are just a bit weird, 
it is very hard to just move into a "settlement" or town as they're 
called now. They'll be gossip, strange looks, talk behind your back, 
and sometimes violence. These are all forms of modern prejudice. 
You'll have to prove that you fit in, believe the same things, even 
personal things that are none of your neighbor's business, before 
they'll welcome your presence.

Well, so what draws us to want to live in these places? Deep down, we 
get a sense of security, that the town will protect us, especially 
when we get older and less able to fend for ourselves, just like 
settlements protected our forefathers on the North American plains. 
This is just no longer true, because there's nothing to be protected 
from, unless you're in some town with mainly white people, and your 
community works together to keep out minorities, with subtle, indirect 
means of course. But this is practicing racism (prejudice plus power), 
and do we want to be part of that?

Another reason we think we want to live in a town is so we can have a 
house. Why a house? So we can put all our stuff in it of course. And 
if we decide we want to buy a house, we have to settle down just so we 
can get a steady job and pay the mortgage. This just keeps getting 
more complex until we feel caught in an endless money loop. We start 
to feel strapped down against our will. So a lot of us start watching 
TV. The TV is this little box usually in the main room of the house. 
When it's off, it's just another piece of furniture collecting dust. 
But when it's on it takes us out of our house, to places all over the 
world, it lets us escape, it lets us...well...travel! So today 
settling down means getting stuck in a job so you can stay in a house 
where you can watch a TV and pretend you're traveling.

The final reason many of us will use as an excuse to settle down will 
be the one my friend Stacy used -- to spend all your time together 
with a lover and to have kids. This reason has the right intention but 
it's believers are misinformed. Why do we have to settle down in order 
to share our love? Let's just say for example that in my travels I 
meet the girl of my dreams and I love her so much that I just want to 
forget the outside world completely and spend every waking minute in 
love. In that case maybe shacking up with her for a while would be a 
great idea. There wouldn't be a TV around because I wouldn't want to 
know about the outside world, much less be misinformed about it by a 
fascist media. There would also be no need for a long term commitment 
either because I believe that true love gets restless after a couple 
of years. Pretty soon one of us is going to be ready for new 
adventures. If the other isn't, it's time to become just friends and 
look for someone who is. Settling down just makes this rather natural 
process much more difficult (selling house, etc.) if not impossible.

The needs for settling down are disappearing faster than North 
American virgin forestland. The world is getting smaller and much more 
accessible. The only reason to settle down these days is because the 
government wants you to. Notice the new urgency in the president's 
voice when he talks about "family values" or when he warns about the 
dangers of travel (from terrorists). He knows that people who stay 
home and watch the TV news and remain isolated from real contact with 
the outside world are very easy to control. 

We never have to settle down if we don't want to. People who really 
love you will always stay in touch, no matter where you go. Home is 
where the heart is. Of course, you can't store much in there, so 
you'll have to get rid of unnecessary things that tie you down -- the 
first two being fear and insecurity.


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JOIN THE CRASH NETWORK!

Crasher: person who is traveling, guest.
Crashee: person who is allowing Crasher to sleep at residence, 
         host/hostess.

Joining is free!  Send email to johnl@netcom.com for a questionnaire 
(or send us an SASE to our mailing address, listed at the end of this 
file). Filling it out and returning it gets you listed in our Crash 
Directory, which is available only to members. Anytime you're planning 
to travel, send $5 for an up-to-the-minute directory and follow the 
guidelines below.


HOW TO USE IT

You can use the Crash Directory to contact other members that you would 
like to meet. Or if you have a destination or journey in mind, you can 
use the directory to find potential crash sites along your planned route 
(flexibility helps). Before your departure, contact your potential 
crashee by mail, phone, or email and inquire about a visit. When all 
your crashes are confirmed, you're ready to hit the proverbial road.


THE CRASH CODE

1.  Any Crashee can turn away a Crasher if they do not agree to the 
    Crash by prior consent.
2.  No charge for stay unless agreed upon by both parties beforehand.
3.  Toilet and shower facilities should be made available to Crasher 
    if possible.
4.  Don't eat Crashee's food unless offered.
5.  Don't use the Crashee's phone, stereo, TV or any other property 
    without their consent.
6.  No stealing.
7.  Don't bring friends over without the prior consent of the Crashee.
8.  Treat each other with respect.
9.  Help each other in every way possible during Crashes.
10. Crasher must obey rules of Crash Pad unless they contradict 
    above rules.


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CRASH INFORMATION

Editors: Miles Poindexter, John Labovitz.

Crash is published in January, March, May, July, September, and 
November of each year. 

Subscriptions are $5 for six issues. A sample issue is $1 or three 
US 29c stamps.  Back issues (text only) are available via anonymous FTP
at netcom.com in directory /pub/johnl/zines/crash.  The printed issues 
also contain illustrations and advertising; for the full Crash experience, 
send for a printed sample.

Crash is happy to hear from you. Send artwork, articles, and aardvarks 
to us at:

    Crash
    519 Castro Street #7
    San Francisco, CA 94114 USA
    email: johnl@netcom.com

If you are interested in advertising in the print or electronic 
version of Crash, please contact us for rates and sizes.

Copyright (C) 1992 Crash. We encourage other zine editors to reprint 
or excerpt parts of any articles written by us (Miles Poindexter or 
John Labovitz). All we ask is that information about this magazine and 
the network be included with it. If you wish to reprint something by 
an outside contributor, please contact them beforehand (either by 
their contact information listed after the article, or c/o Crash).


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END OF CRASH MAY92