[2 versions]

40 years older, but no less liberal

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-hippies3-2009may03,0,6275336.story

Feeling like outcasts amid a population of conservative students, 
several hippies formed a commune near USC's campus in the 1960s. They 
and many subsequent residents returned for a reunion Saturday.

By Bob Pool
May 3, 2009

The handful of hippies enrolled at USC 40 years ago banded together 
for moral support.

The aging individualists returned Saturday to one of the 1960s' last 
remaining communes, strictly for fun.

The commune occupies a 114-year-old Victorian mansion on West 27th 
Street, a few blocks from the USC campus. These days it sticks out 
from other houses in the area because it doesn't have a fence in 
front or bars on the windows.

But back then the commune's founders felt like unwelcome outsiders 
among their conservative classmates. That's why they named the place 
"Ellis Island," after the legendary East Coast port of entry that 
welcomed so many newcomers to the United States.

"I enrolled at USC because I didn't know any better," house 
co-founder Rush Riddle said Saturday at a backyard barbecue, sitting 
beneath a wall decorated with a peeling anti-war poster. The 
59-year-old still lives in the commune and now works as a Los Angeles 
electrical station operator.

"I wanted to study architecture and my parents had a friend in 
Mobile, Ala., who said he'd heard it had a good architectural 
program. I'd visited Berkeley. I just figured more hippies would 
eventually show up at USC," he said.

But they didn't, said former commune resident Tom Conerly, 60, an 
architect in Santa Cruz.

David Harris, an anti-Vietnam War activist, "came on campus to make a 
speech and a bunch of football players showed up to shut him down," 
Conerly recalled. "David Harris would not let us intervene.

"That nonviolence incident impressed me. I joined Students for a 
Democratic Society and moved in here in 1970," he said of his 
introduction to the commune.

Life at Ellis Island "was an intense enough experience to bring us 
back" for periodic reunions, Conerly said. "I won't go to a USC 
homecoming, but I'll come here."

Hamid Naficy, a film professor at Chicago's Northwestern University, 
lived in the commune for two years.

"This house has always been on the margins of USC -- it's been a 
place for the disaffected. Originally, buying the house wasn't part 
of the ethos. There was no thought of becoming mainstream," said Naficy, 65.

But that's what happened in 1967 when USC evicted commune members 
from their first house on nearby 35th Street to make way for 
construction of Dedeaux Field. When the owner of the vacant 
three-story dwelling on 27th Street balked at renting to hippies, 
several of them decided to work within the system.

"We went downtown and talked to the city Redevelopment Agency and 
they agreed to set up a lease-option agreement," said Terry 
Poplawski, 59, an original resident of the house who is now a mail 
carrier in Ukiah.

Four of them chipped in $700 and signed a lease with an option to 
buy. They purchased the house for $28,000 in 1976.

Ellis Island is now co-owned by Poplawski and his wife Karen, Riddle 
and Peter Van Zant, who lives in Seattle.

Karen Poplawski, 59, a somatic educator, met and married her husband 
at the commune. "I was a USC student, but I didn't fit in with the 
sorority crowd. The people here were people I was at ease and 
comfortable with," she said.

The couple's son, Orion Poplawski, was born in the commune and lived 
there for six years. Now a 37-year-old computer administrator who is 
married with two children in Boulder, Colo., he also returned for 
Saturday's reunion along with about 50 others.

As many as 300 have lived at one time or another at the commune, 
which for years operated an attic crash pad for short-term residents. 
Los Angeles actor Christian Reeve, 59, lived there for six months in 1973.

He had forgotten Ellis Island's street address but went to the 
downtown library to look it up in a 1973 phone book. At Saturday's 
reunion, Reeve said he was stunned to find out the commune still exists.

There's more stability now. Its eight current residents have lived 
there an average of 16 years.

"I feel very comfortable. We're all kind of liberal, but we give each 
other space," said one of the newest, two-year resident Radhika 
Hersey, a 27-year-old artist.

Fifteen-year resident Mark Torres, a KPFK-FM radio producer, said he 
waited three years to get in.

No matter how bad it seems outside, "when we walk in the front door 
of Ellis Island, our liberties are restored," said Torres, 47.

As the ex-hippies were setting up a video projector in the living 
room to show early pictures of Ellis Island, Riddle was in the attic 
showing off its music stage, psychedelic lighting, Day-Glo painted 
walls set off with black lights and the old car bumper plastered with 
stickers hanging from the ceiling.

Longtime next-door neighbors are tolerant of the bands that perform 
there on Halloween and May 1 each year, and nearby college students 
drop in to listen to the music, Riddle said.

There are plans to put the West 27th Street house in a trust so the 
Ellis Island vibe can continue after its four owners are gone, he said.

Survival of the commune in perpetuity, he feels, would be outta sight.
--

[email protected]

--------

Conservative University's Unlikely Hippies Reunite (Los Angeles)

http://www.mlive.com/newsflash/national/index.ssf?/base/national-4/124131878330590.xml&storylist=national

5/2/2009
Bob Pool

(AP) ­ LOS ANGELES -- The handful of hippies enrolled 40 years ago at 
the University of Southern California banded together back then for 
moral support.

The aging individualists returned to celebrate the survival of one of 
the 1960s' last remaining communes on Saturday strictly for fun.

The place is in a 114-year-old Victorian mansion on West 27th Street 
a few blocks from the USC campus. These days it sticks out from other 
houses in the area because it doesn't have a fence in front or bars 
on the windows.

But back then the commune's founders felt as though they were 
unwelcome outsiders among their conservative classmates. That's why 
they named the place "Ellis Island," after the legendary east coast 
port of entry that welcomed so many newcomers to the United States.

"I enrolled at USC because I didn't know any better," acknowledged 
house co-founder Rush Riddle as he sat Saturday at a backyard 
barbecue beneath a wall decorated with a peeling anti-war poster. The 
59-year-old still lives in the commune and now works as a Los Angeles 
electrical station operator.

"I wanted to study architecture and my parents had a friend in 
Mobile, Ala., who said he'd heard it had a good architectural 
program. I'd visited Berkeley. I just figured more hippies would 
eventually show up at USC," he said.

But they didn't, recalled former commune resident Tom Conerly, 60, 
now an architect in Santa Cruz.

"I remember (anti-Vietnam war activist) David Harris came on campus 
to make a speech and a bunch of football players showed up to shut 
him down. David Harris would not let us intervene," Conerly said.

"That nonviolence incident impressed me. I joined Students for a 
Democratic Society and moved in here in 1970."

Life at Ellis Island "was an intense enough experience to bring us 
back" for periodic reunions, Conerly said. "I won't go to a USC 
homecoming, but I'll come here."

Hamid Naficy, a Chicago resident who is now a film professor at 
Northwestern University, lived in the commune two years.

"This house has always been on the margins of USC -- it's been a 
place for the disaffected. Originally, buying the house wasn't part 
of the ethos. There was not thought of becoming mainstream," said Naficy, 65.

But that's what happened in 1967 when USC evicted commune members 
from their first house on nearby 35th Street to make way for 
construction of Dedeaux Field. When the owner of the vacant 
three-story 27th Street dwelling balked at renting to hippies, 
several of them decided to work within the system.

Four of them chipped in $700 and signed a lease with an option to 
buy. They managed to purchase the house for $28,000 in 1976.

Ellis Island is now co-owned by one of the original residents, 
59-year-old Terry Poplawski, a Ukiah letter carrier, his wife Karen, 
Riddle and current Seattle resident Peter Van Zant.

Karen Poplawski, 59, a somantic educator, met and married her husband 
at the commune. "I was a USC student, but I didn't fit in with the 
sorority crowd. The people here were people I was at ease and 
comfortable with," she said.

The couple's son, Orion Poplawski, was born and lived six years in 
the commune. Now a 37-year-old Boulder, Colo., computer administrator 
who is married with two children, he also returned for Saturday's 
reunion along with about 50 others.

As many as 300 have lived at one time or another at the commune, 
which for years operated an attic crash pad for short-term residents. 
One of them, Los Angeles actor Christian Reeve, 59, lived there six 
months in 1973.

He had forgotten Ellis Island's street address but went to the 
downtown library to look it up in a 1973 phone book. Reeve, who 
attended Saturday's reunion, said he was stunned when he found the 
commune still existed.

There's more stability now. It's eight current residents have lived 
there an average of 16 years.

"I feel very comfortable. We're all kind of liberal, but we give each 
other space," said one of the newest, 2-year resident Radhika Hersey, 
a 27-year-old artist.

Fifteen-year-resident Mark Torres, a KPFK-FM radio producer, said he 
waited three years to get in. No matter how bad it seems outside 
"when we walk in the front door of Ellis Island, our liberties are 
restored," said Torres, 47.

As the ex-hippies were setting up a video projector in the commune 
living room to show early pictures of Ellis Island, Riddle was in the 
attic, showing off its music stage, psychedelic lighting, 
black-light-lit day-glow painted walls and the old bumper 
sticker-plastered car bumper hanging from the ceiling.

Longtime next-door neighbors are tolerant of the live bands that 
perform there twice yearly on Halloween and May 1, and nearby college 
students drop in to listen to the music, Riddle said.

There are plans to put the West 27th Street house in a trust so the 
Ellis Island vibe can continue after its four owners are gone, he said.

Survival of the commune in perpetuity, he feels, would be outta sight.

.


--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Sixties-L" group.
To post to this group, send email to [email protected]
To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
[email protected]
For more options, visit this group at 
http://groups.google.com/group/sixties-l?hl=en
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to