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Purple Daze Page 5


  * Design created by sculptor Thomas Hudson Jones, former employee of the Army’s Institute of Heraldry.

  Ziggy

  34 people died in the riots.

  1,000 injured: 90 cops, 136 firemen,

  10 guardsman, 23 people from government agencies,

  773 civilians and protesters, including Don’s dad.

  I know because Bubba tore out newspaper articles:TRAFFIC STOP SPARKS RIOTS

  144-HOURS OF VIOLENCE

  EIGHT MEN SLAIN: GUARD MOVES IN

  118 of the injuries were from gun shot wounds.

  What if Don had gone with his hippy dippy parents?

  Don

  I can’t believe Kramer gave Ziggy

  a B-on her essay about the riots. So

  I stand up in class to make what I think

  is a brilliant point:

  “It’s not kids out there killing, looting,

  getting their heads busted open.

  Hey, man, what’s all this crap,

  THE TROUBLE WITH YOUTH TODAY?”

  Phil

  Dear Cheryl,

  I got my hair cut again today. Three of my

  non-barber buddies gave it to me. WOW!

  It looks like SHIT!!!

  As far as whore houses go, they sure

  as hell ain’t government sponsored.

  There is a whore for every GI here.

  I don’t know of a VC cooze

  that won’t go down for a buck.

  Nancy needn’t worry, though,

  because they all have gonorrhea

  or razor blades up their snatch.

  It is the god’s truth, too, because

  a few guys in our outfit have

  scars their moms will never see.

  Your friend, Phil

  P.S. Make sure Don gets married (you)

  and has kids (yours) before he gets drafted.

  I wouldn’t wish this crap on my worst enemy.

  Cheryl

  Sluts wear red and black on Friday.

  That’s what Ziggy says.

  I wear it for you-know-who,

  though we don’t go all the way

  ... yet.

  Don

  My parents signed us up for

  an overnight retreat.

  The brochure says we’ll be

  plunged into an environment

  radically different from

  our own.

  It says, “we’ll be taught by not knowing,”

  whatever that means.

  “You won’t be alone, honey,” Mom says.

  “Several girls from your school volunteered.”

  Girls?

  Ziggy

  No problem getting a room

  at the Aku-Aku for Mick’s

  going-away party.

  Just wore a tube top.

  Cheryl and Don are making out

  on the bed. I’m in the bathroom,

  smoking a joint, thinking,

  I could be married to Mickey.

  Picket fence. Station wagon.

  Babies. Babies. Babies.

  I ruin a tube of slut-red lipstick

  writing a poem on the mirror.

  Graveyards and headstones

  are merely a lie.

  People never live

  therefore they can’t die.

  Instead of signing my name, I build

  a Kleenex bonfire in the sink and

  go blurry when white burns black.

  Cheryl

  His hot breath

  in my ear.

  Please move nearer.

  His sweet lips

  here, there.

  I want you everywhere.

  His whispers

  inside and out.

  This bra fastens in front.

  A DJ on 93/KHJ AM

  shouts into the motel room,

  “Another hit from The Supremes!”

  Our chaperones sing,

  “Stop! In the Name of Love!”

  Nancy

  I drizzle syrup into glass pitchers,

  fill salt and pepper shakers,

  memorize Carl Jung for a test.

  The psychiatrist smokes a pipe

  beside my plate, Adam and Eve on a Raft.

  The boss scrambles from the kitchen.

  “Nan, there’s been an accident—”

  I choke on poached eggs on toast,

  bump boysenberry syrup. Clots of

  neurosis and disharmony

  slop across Formica.

  “Phil?”

  “Oh, no, it’s nothing like that.

  It’s your aunt.”

  I mop up the mess, confused.

  My parents are only children,

  like me.

  “Your sister says it isn’t serious,

  but they need you at home.”

  It’s got to be Ziggy hoping I’ll go to

  Mickey’s party. I imagine them making-out

  on a motel bed. God, I won’t see Phil for

  10 or 11 months.

  By then I’ll be in a state of malaise—

  severed from all meaning of life.

  Phil

  Hey Angel,

  It’s been 14 days since I heard from Nancy,

  so for the last few days I’ve been saving my

  thoughts for you.

  I’m at an outpost and so is a damn near-dead

  Vietnamese farmer. He stepped on a land mine

  near his hut. Now his intestines are feeding flies.

  The choppers that are used for evacuation

  are out picking up dead and wounded grunts

  from a recon patrol ambushed 2 hours ago.

  A marine came back with an ear tucked inside

  an M&M wrapper, later speared it on the antenna

  of his Jeep.

  Life is cheap here—

  right and wrong must

  be talking to someone else.

  I figure I should get a letter from you today.

  Hope so.

  Christ, I’m homesick, Phil

  P.S. Am off on a nature hike—

  all canopy, no light.

  Don

  You think I’d spend the night at

  the L.A. Mission if I’d known

  guys are locked in one dorm,

  girls in another.

  Dinner: Greasy beans, macaroni,

  stale bread, water.

  Showers: Line up. Sign out towels.

  Strip down. It’s delousing night.

  We’re supposed to experience the many

  sides of suffering. Dad keeps asking,

  “What’re you doing to relieve the pain?”

  After stale doughnuts and watery coffee

  we walk to Skid Row, twenty square blocks

  of garbage, vomit, piss, and shit.

  Dad takes Mom’s hand, side-stepping

  bums on the sidewalk. She teaches him

  the words to “Gate of Sweet Nectar.”

  I duck into a diner for a burger, fries,

  and chocolate shake. No way it should be

  this hard to get laid.

  Ziggy

  dear cheryl,

  how’d your ortho appointment go? social studies was a B - on the scale

  of boring. kramer said we had to write an essay about flag-burning—

  and i wasn’t really listening cuz it felt like one of my bra straps

  broke until he says torching a flag is a type of freedom of expression

  protected by the u.s. constitution—and sometimes people have to use

  more than their brains to argue for change in government policy—and

  it’s up to people who know the difference between right and wrong to

  fight against authority—and it’s sort of interesting so i sit up realizing

  my bra is definitely loose and i’m wondering who invented these

  boulder-holders—and he says there’s no physical damage caused by

  burning
a flag if you don’t count ruining a good piece of cloth—and he’s

  actually ranting about why tax payers should waste good money to

  prosecute pyros—and i’m thinking that bras should be burned too and

  how i’m gonna nab an A on this essay cuz he’s got it all laid out until he

  says we have to write it from the opposite viewpoint—and then some

  numb nuts blurts out “you mean like burning President Johnson in

  effigy is the desperation of a deaf mute who can’t find a more intelli-

  gent way to express himself?” i’m sunk.

  love, ziggy

  Mickey

  USS Hermitage LSD-34 Pussy Patrol

  Don—

  So, we snuck this dog on board for our

  mascot. A scrawny mutt, probably a virgin.

  We named him Stud.

  The signalman flashed every ship

  in the area till we found a bitch.

  Stud got a bath and all gussied up with

  aftershave. Everyone crammed in to

  catch the action, but that bitch wasn’t

  interested in our guy.

  I think she was a Lesbian.

  “The Mick”

  P.S. You better write if you want

  to hear more of these true-life stories.

  Cheryl

  I learned to kiss in fourth grade.

  Bonnie and I shared Harold,

  her on one side,

  me on the other.

  We practiced after school,

  like homework.

  One day, Harold gave me a

  Saint Christopher medal

  wrapped in tin foil.

  I still have it.

  Mickey

  USS Hermitage LSD-34 Norfolk, Virginia

  Dear Cheryl,

  Guess what I had to do last night?

  Wash everybody’s sailor hat, I swear.

  That’s 80 hats. Took me 4 ½ hours.

  Just because I didn’t tell the CC

  we were out of soap, no fooling.

  God, I can’t wait to get out of here.

  Love, Mickey

  P.S. Ziggy’s letters are all the same.

  If she doesn’t stop asking about

  “our future” I’m gonna dump her.

  Don

  Dad hasn’t been baking as many

  brownies since the price of a lid

  (with seeds and stems)

  hit ten bucks.

  His new high is throwing himself

  into L.A.’s low-life scum.

  Every weekend he and Mom

  stick a jug of water in a grocery

  bag and grab IDs.

  No soap.

  No toothbrush.

  No change of clothes.

  “We can tell you endless stories about

  people on the streets,” Mom says.

  “The point is, what are we doing to help them?”

  Phil

  Hi Doll,

  Just changed pens. Mine’s been

  skipping for the last ten letters.

  This one’s Gunther’s.

  If we didn’t have a mascot,

  he’d be perfect—a big goofy gorilla

  from Missouri who sleeps with his

  fiancée’s garter belt.

  On pay day I left money on my bed,

  and he put it in my locker.

  We never steal from each other—

  just from the company next door,

  mops and brooms.

  I’ll never take electricity for granted again.

  Guess that’s true of a lot of things.

  I’m so horny I can hardly put my hat on.

  I have 7,360 hours more to serve till I get leave.

  Your friend and a bit more—Phil

  P.S. I’m so bugged about no mail from Nancy

  that I halfway wish I’d get shot up bad

  enough to get sent home.

  Mickey

  USS Hermitage LSD-34 Miami, Florida

  Dear Cheryl,

  We’re getting underway for five months.

  Listen to this:

  South America, Panama, Jamaica, Trinidad,

  Puerto Rico, Guantanamo Bay.

  There’s more, but I can’t remember them.

  Sorry I messed up on the tape recorder.

  Next time I’ll use a slower speed so I don’t

  sound like Alvin and the Chipmunks.

  Love, Mick

  P.S. Can you look up Cuba in Kramer’s atlas? I’m a little lost.

  Cheryl

  Don slams the brakes,

  too late.

  We stall

  on a ledge, a

  steel teeter-totter.

  Pedal to the metal;

  back tires spit dirt.

  We start walking,

  his arm on my shoulder,

  street lights winking below.

  My heart slows, wishing he’d say

  he loves me before we find a pay phone

  and call a tow truck.

  I’m dying to say it back.

  Don

  Dad bursts in with the Los Angeles Times.

  “What happened to the Rambler!”

  White walls muddy,

  weeds in tail pipe,

  broken hood ornament.

  “Hell, I don’t know,” I say,

  sinking a carpet putt.

  “You must’ve gotten high

  last night, driven off a cliff.”

  That stops him real quick.

  Mickey

  USS Hermitage LSD-34 Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

  Dear Cheryl,

  They are definitely working us.

  Today I lugged 200 lb. barrels of oil

  up and down ladders from the bow

  to the stern of the ship.

  The next two weeks we are going out

  all day to shoot. I’m kind of worried

  cuz the last time we went out to shoot,

  I lost part of my hearing, no shit.

  When I get home I’m going to throw a

  3-weeker like you’ve never seen, I swear.

  I have an ID card that says I’m 21. We’ll

  have a supply of booze that won’t quit.

  Love, Mickey

  P.S. I’m saving for a Swinger so

  I can send you some pics.

  Can you send me some?

  I miss my peeps.

  Phil

  Hey Cheryl,

  Let’s start out with what I did today:

  5:00 a.m., firing off the guy.

  6:00 I hit chow (stale toast and raw bacon).

  7:30 our work day began.

  10:00 me and Gunther worked with ammo.

  10:30 we switched from coffee to beer,

  which always improves our mood.

  12:00 we ate hot chow in mermite cans.

  1:00 we cleaned the gun. Gunther cleaned

  the muzzle break—I cleaned the breech block.

  All that bullshit was finished by 3:30.

  I am pissed right now because this is the

  6th day since I didn’t get one single letter.