Thursday, June 08, 2023

One Coin

The other day I found a penny, or rather it found me.

It had been sitting in place for a few days. Many people had passed it by but none had thought it worth their time to scoop it up.

Maybe out of pity for the cast-off, which over the course of our lifetimes has lost almost all of its value, I picked it up.

The penny was marked with the date it was minted, 1971. 

Every coin has its story; few of them get told.

***

1971 — What a year that was! I quit my job as a pizza deliveryman for Cottage Inn Pizza in Ann Arbor and drove an old white Chevy van with "Ft. Myers, Fla." stenciled on the side all the way across America. 

Exiting the freeway in San Francisco, we chugged up Fell Street, turned right onto Fillmore Street, and drove until just before Pine Street, arriving at our destination: the self-proclaimed world headquarters of Running Dog Inc., would-be publisher of the forthcoming SunDance magazine.

The building was nestled into a space next to a blues club called Minnie’s Can-Do. 

We were a very small start-up team and before we could publish this brand new magazine, we had to build out the office by sheet-rocking the walls, painting them, refinishing and shellacking the floor. 

As a flourish of sorts, we sealed a penny into that newly shiny hardwood just before we finished preparing the space that would see an amazing menagerie of the famous (John Lennon, Yoko Ono, Jerry Rubin, etc.) and the crazy (too many to list) and the talented (everybody) walk through its front door over the next two years.

The experience of helping produce that magazine helped shape my career, leading directly to Rolling Stone, the Center for Investigative Reporting and all the rest.

***

Many years later, when SunDance was already a distant memory, I happened to be back in what was by then known in real estate terms as the Upper Fillmore District. There were no blues clubs left in the area but plenty of fancy, chic shops. After a brief search, I located old number 1913 and stepped inside for the first time since our first magazine dream had died there three decades earlier.

The space was by then a boutique. I feigned interest in the women's clothes on the racks. What I was actually seeking was pretty vague — some wisp or ghost of a memory, nothing more than that. The sheetrock had long since been dismantled, the walls had been repainted many times, and the track lighting overhead was a major upgrade from our day. All the evidence of our time there seemed to have vanished.

But then, near the rear of the store, I spotted something that stopped me dead in my tracks. There was the penny we’d imbedded in the hardwood floor, still frozen in time with its date: 1971.

Every coin has a story; few of them get told.

This one’s did.

LINKS:

  • Canadian wildfire smoke: Worst air quality yet may be headed to New York City (ABC)

  • Wildfire Smoke Blots Sun and Prompts Health Alerts in Much of U.S. (NYT)

  • Murder, the Military and Radicalization: How Much Is Tied to a Lack of Support for Veterans? (KQED)

  • Ukrainians face homelessness, disease risk as floods crest from breached dam (Reuters)

  • Destroyed Ukrainian Dam Floods War Zone and Forces Residents to Flee (NYT)

  • Ukraine Offensive Has 'Broken Through' Russian Lines: Prigozhin (Newsweek)

  • The Next Crisis Will Start With Empty Office Buildings (Atlantic)

  • Prosecutors Tell Trump’s Legal Team He Is a Target of Investigation (NYT)

  • Chris Christie blasts Trump during presidential bid announcement (CNN)

  • Hard-right Republicans, still angry over debt ceiling, foil McCarthy on vote (WP)

  • Sam Altman says OpenAI won’t go public now because he may have to make ‘a very strange decision’ that investors will disagree with (Fortune)

  • Google Cloud is partnering with Mayo Clinic as it tries to expand use of generative A.I. in health care (CNBC)

  • Faster sorting algorithms discovered using deep reinforcement learning (Nature)

  • They Fled San Francisco. The A.I. Boom Pulled Them Back. (NYT)

  • Google's Bard AI is getting better at programming (Engadget)

  • How to write essays using ChatGPT (GeekyGadgets)

  • How to Regulate AI — Biden’s former top tech policymaker explains how guardrails around technology should work. (FP)

  • AI Doesn’t Pose an Existential Risk—but Silicon Valley Does (The Nation)

  • Uber Eats to deploy up to 2,000 robots to deliver food (ABC)

  • New York City's Homeless Bill of Rights becomes law (NPR)

  • Why does China want Uyghurs overseas to be silent? (Economist)

  • 'Home Is Like a Jail': Afghan Soldier Weathers Injuries, Uncertainty in US Asylum Bid (Military.com)

  • US Secretary of State Antony Blinken had an "open, candid" conversation with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman about a wide range of bilateral issues, a US official said. (Reuters)

  • Chemical industry used big tobacco’s tactics to conceal evidence of PFAS risks (Guardian)

  • Area Man Somehow Endures Harrowing Entertainment-Free Commute (The Onion)

 

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