The Glendoran – July/Aug 1992
Every
Town Needs a Castle
“Skipper’s Always Right, You Know”
Part III – By Dwayne Hunn

I
had lived at the pharm for less than two weeks when we first met. He was
pleasant, smiled with a twinkle in his eyes and asked the normal,
get-acquainted type questions. He seemed to like asking questions about you.
They were proper questions. Skipper was "proper." They were also
smart questions -- smart as in they were intended to tell Skipper how smart you
were and to remind you that Skipper was smart.
In
the proper sense, Frank Landon Jr. was raised "right." His dad was a successful businessman and
his mother was a swell lady. Skipper was taught to get and value a good
education and discipline. He did.
Skipper,
however, never looked proper on his noisy 175CC Kawasaki motorbike. Pushing 6',
Skipper seemed too big for that toy bike. Michael had his giant Harley, Scott
had his souped up tear drop and Glen and I had our Honda 350s. Why didn't Skipper have a real bike?
One
day, when Glen and I were washing our bikes and Skipper rode onto the Pharm
with his, I circuitously probed for the answer with, "Your smaller bike's
a lot noisier than ours. How come?"
"Well, mine's a four banger and yours are two
cycle bikes. So my four pistons are
pounding up and down a lot more than yours. There are advantages and
disadvantages to that which are..." With that opening, Skipper launched
into one of his engineering educational treatises, which he delivered as often
as allowed.

Figure 1 Glen Speer, Suzanne Carpenter (Baum) and Frank "Skipper" Landon in 1986 at Glenn's wedding at the castle
Ever
since they were kids, Michael and he had been friends. They romped through the orchards, roamed the
hills, played pranks and built forts together. Somewhere between kidhood and
formal schooling, Michael came to respect Skipper's engineering acumen. Soon
after that, Michael added a couple more levels of regard to the lofty plateaus
of respect on which he held whatever Skipper had to say about engineering,
government or business.
One
needed only to sit and listen to see how much Michael respected what Skipper
had to say and how closely their thoughts coincided. Through the late 60's
there was plenty of opportunity to sit and listen to their thoughts.
About
once a week one could mosey up to the Tin Palace, slide back the 10 foot door,
walk by the wine cellar elevator, with cuckoos popping out from their clock
doors and art work covering the walls and floor, step through the open 6"
thick wooden refrigerator door, and take a place on the rugged floor of
Michael's bedroom; a converted citrus refrigerator, big enough for a bed,
couple chairs and desks, bank vault and various memorabilia. Three to 10
people from 15 to 65 years in age might be there on any given night. The Pharm's proverbial gallon of cheap wine
would be passed, filling the Pharm's recycled large jelly jars or smaller
shrimp cocktail wine glasses. The Vietnam War, race relations, work ethic,
drugs, hippies, poverty, economic development, education, students, Glendora
High School, politics, Republicans, Democrats, Black Panthers, girls, love,
marriage, experiences, adventures -- especially Michael's, Pharm events and
more were open on any night's agenda.
Michael's
room was not like most rooms. The riveting "click-clack" of the
pendulum on the 1872 Seth Thomas mechanical clock, the steely stare of the
Wells Fargo vault with large cloth on top, the blinking on-and-off red and
green lights popping out from the conduit lining the wall near the ceiling, the
little lights connected to the phone and coded black box on the wall against
his bed not far from his pillow, the loaded rifles across from the Marine Corps
memorabilia, the two Waldenesque solitary sitting chairs, the oriental rugs on
the oak floor - filled a wooden refrigerator room bolted close by a steel
handle on the 6" door.
Like
most rooms it had four corners. The captivating spirit of the room came not
from all its stuff. It came from the electricity that flowed on those ringside
nights when spots on the oriental rugs or oak floor were at a premium.
Would
people pay big dollars to sit ringside if someone zinging his ideas didn't come
out from each corner? Would people have
continued sprawled on the floor of that old freezer room each week for years if
people didn't provide their own electricity?
Believe me, Michael's cheap gallon jug wine wasn't the draw.
For
those who like to see things clearly in pictures, Michael and the likes of
Skipper and John McCann guarded the right corner with most of the crowd
cheering them on. Glen and I danced to
the left with a sparser cheering section, if any, offering support. And on any
given night, some unexpected outside Pharm hands would come with points to
make and stories to tell.
Those were wonderful, challenging, free-for-alls
with raised voices, gestures, emotions, fact, figures and experiences intertwined
with physical, philosophical, moral, physical and scientific theories. No matter how heated or involved the topic
or crowd became, bellowing laughter and guffaws always resounded from each and
every of Michael's bedroom debate nights.
No matter how noisy the night's discussion had been, there were usually
so many with so much to be said that your mind always had time to be quiet,
listen and digest. Somewhere, late into
the night, with Michael's rifles, family, Pharm and Marine Corps memorabilia
adorning the walls beneath the little red and green lights of the Pharm's
ever-vigilant radar system, we'd also hear the click-clack of the mechanical
clock. When those metallic heart beats
filled larger gaps between thoughtful words, we knew it was time to go home,
rest our heads and let the talk sink in.

Figure 2 On a Saturday afternoon, Skipper and his wife, Phyllis, along with 86 other of Michael Rubel's Clock Tower Reunion party guests, roamed downtown Glendora looking for Michael's lost charter bus to take them to dinner.
It
didn't take much sinking in time for one to discover the profound respect with
which Michael held Skipper. How Skipper gained this respect might be evident
from a few examples.
For
example, Skipper had a lot to do with preparing the fortifications for
Michael's 40' high childhood tower.
Yes, pre-teenage Michael with friends like Skipper built a four story
fort. In looking at its picture in the Castles by Mike book you
immediately realize that this thing is built with junk and with dangerous
childish lack of planning. (Today's Rubelia may not be much different.) All the
more reason, I guess, that it needed a good defense system. Skipper, knowing
even as a kid that he was masterful tactician and strategist, assumed an
instrumental role in defending this bastion of freedom for kids like he and
Michael from other not-so-nice kids. Trenches were laid around the fort and
lined with broken glass and other sharp objects. Barbed wire lay just beyond that. Next were fences behind which working canons filled with large
carbide rocks charged by the gas from an old Hudson sprayer laid ready. Held in
defensive reserve were BB guns, catapults, dogs, water hoses, and firecrackers.
(Amazing how little in style and substance today's defense system for Rubelia
has changed.)
Skipper's
defense system was wonderful and Michael loved it. You may remember, however,
your parents warning you that there "will
always be someone tougher than you, so don't go looking for a
fight." Well, their fortress and defense system advertisement brought
someone tougher out of the bushes. Michael's father. Like any grown-up he
immediately saw how dangerous that fort could be to any neighborhood kids, so
father's bulldozer plowed Skipper's defenses and the fort into a field of
dreams.
I
guess even the passage of years didn't erase the thought of designing a defense
system for a castle from Skipper's mind. While Michael was in the Marine Corps,
dispatching heavy military equipment fell into one of his areas of
responsibility. Such access made these two grown kids realize how the Rubelian
Castle's safety could be enhanced by a ----- TANK.
Now
let me stress that Camp Pendleton is not today missing a tank from years ago. But
should God's video play back some days from back then, it might show that for a
few days there was a tank camouflaged in bushes a lot closer to the Rubelia
than to Camp Pendleton.
Maturity
refined Skipper's skills and turned his engineering skills to more peaceful
pursuits. Guess you might even suggest it turned from harboring tanks to
cleansing doves.
When
Michael was trying to cement enough old junk together so that not even the bank
would dare dismantle or plow under his
grown up castle, Klaus Schilling, Ted Folley, Skipper, Glen and Michael went
riding out into the hinterlands in search of a large, ugly, out-dated
engine. Miles from the Pharm, in the
middle of a field on the outskirts of an unnamed city, as usual they found just
what the Pharm needed. Unfortunately, this engine was ensconced in a slab of
concrete that measured 10'x12' and 8" deep.
"No
problem," said Skipper. "I'll just blast it out."
After
speeding away for about 5 minutes, these scared young men heard a blast. A
THUNDERING BLAST! Their concern with a
blast much more horrendous than they had expected was reflected by the 2 weeks
they waited before returning to the outskirts of this unnamed city.
"See,
I told you. 'No problem.'" Skipper said as he kicked back to
"advise" Michael and gang on how to load the unensconced 8 ton steam
engine onto a truck and take it back to the Pharm.
Today
the engine cleanses dove, makes the birds happy and neighbors leery.
The
downstroke of its piston uses the neighborhood sewer line for decompression
which raises the neighbors' decibel and toilet water levels. It also sometimes
raises their ire. The birds, however, are ecstatic for whenever the engine
belches toilet water to its ceramic lip level -- the bird bath squirts six
inches of water heavenward...
By
the late 60's Michael's “Pharm” goals had moved well beyond fixing and
installing second hand tools, pumps, bird baths, riding Harleys and swiping
tanks and filling the wine cellar with empty gallon jugs. Michael was more and
more looking heavenward, wanting to fan heaven's skies. As usual, the “Pharm's”
specially assigned Guardian Angel, provided the materials at the appropriate
time and price.
Out
of the smog, the phone rang. The phone company asked Michael if he would like
their old telephone poles. Voila! Now
Michael just needed the windmill. Guardian Angels, as you know, pay special
attention to recyclers and idiots. Since Michael was supposedly one of those,
God provided the windmill. . As was common in those days for zany, crazy
projects, a crowd of in-and-out patient “Pharm” hands gathered together to help
bring the windmill back from a pig farm abutting a California State Prison.
About 40 fools, with nothing better to do than joust with windmills and eat
pig, lined up early one weekend morning outside the Castle walls for the jaunt
to Lompoc. With all the regular suspects gathered, the tools of their trade
were piled in an old truck -- old wrenches, acetylene torches, come-alongs,
ropes, cables, sledges, crowbars, hammers, pliers, shields and spears. After
checking for old Mother Luck, the caravan of Quixotes went off again to test
their pluck.
The
Lompoc farmer would be glad to rid himself of the windmill if we would
disassemble and leave for him the 60' tower. He was so happy that a handful of
city slicking fools were willing to leave him this pile of scrap steel for free
that he decided to host a barbecue for us. He even invited us out to watch him
shoot the master of ceremonies, the barbecued pig to-be. There weren't many
squeals of delight from us city slicking fools when we watched the farmer's
rifle begin preparation of our juicy pork delight.
Michael
wasn't as festive as the farmer or those looking forward to eating the Master
Ceremony and partying through the night.
Squealing,
though not as badly as the pig, Michael was heard to say, "How are we
going to get that thing down in one-piece?" as he looked six stories up at
the windmill, portraiting that concerned look that often arose on Michael's
face during his castle building years.
"No
problem." said Skipper. "Just go get me about a half dozen old
mattresses."
The
next day, while the grunts ran around for mattresses and started torching and
unbolting whatever Skipper told them to, Skipper wandered and pondered while
looking up at the windmill. Finally, as the torcher and cutters were running
out of tower to torch and cut, Skipper said to the mattress bearers, "Put
those there and there and there."
Yes,
Skipper was good in the field. Perhaps it sounded like he used a little too
much dynamite to get that bird-bath engine out, but he was close, and it got
out. In Lompoc that day, as the ropes were pulled, the last torch cut made and
the tower followed Newton's rule to earth, we knew again that Skipper was good.
He was also close. The windmill was off the tower. It was now ensconced in the
earth a "close" 5' from the cushioning mattresses.
So
what if Michael had to rebuild the engine. Taking the job, coming close and
getting it done is part of what brings respect. If you have never built castles
out of junk and defended forts, dynamited an engine or removed a windmill, but
you've worn cleats or been a sporting couch potato, you know the adage.
"It's not whether you win or lose, it's how you play the game."
Big
pharm projects always became a wonderful game to play. Skipper played the game.
And he played it well.
Of
course, when you are new to the Pharm you don't know how much credence to put
into the renowned reputation of a guy everyone calls "Skipper." So you just listen to the stories and
watch.
After
the summer forest fires of 1968, Skipper told Michael that the mountain was
going to wash down the hill and destroy the Pharm. Michael listened. Then he
went out to the Pharm entrance at the foot of Glencoe Heights Drive and buried
and nailed 4"x 6" posts and 3"x8" planks until he had an
eight foot high wall.
Although
Michael spent much of that summer building what we Pharm hands were certain was
a wall, smarter people than us, who drove much bigger and fancier cars than any
of us, saw it as something else. Over and over again one of those fancy cars
would stop, the silent electronic and tinted window would slide down and a
Darth Vaderish voice from inside would ask, "Hey, Noah, how's your Ark
goin? ...Hah, Hah." Usually Michael, in his stained and holey hat, floppy
and creosoted pants, would turn to look again at the wall as the car
accelerated away. Then he began asking us, "What do you think?" as he'd
position us to look at his work.
"Looks
plenty strong, Michael."
"Ah
huh. And what do you think of it?"
he'd repeat.
"What
do you mean, Michael? What do we think
of the wall?"
"Yeah.
Well, you do think? It's a wall,
huh?" he'd ask.
"Yeah.
Well, isn't it."
"Yeah.
Well, yeah it' supposed to be."
Well,
Skipper's forecasting and Michael's work looked pretty silly and perhaps
unbelievable until those few days in October 1969 when about 20 inches of rain
flushed the mountain down. Noah's Ark didn't get up and float. It stood tall
against tons of flowing mud. Sure a garage, station wagon, boat and tons of mud
eventually broached the wall. Without
Skipper's words and foolish Noah's wall, the other uncountable tons of mud
wouldn't have turned "left" and the neighborhood and pharm would have
needed only lots of drying sun to become California's largest sandbox.
A few years after the flood, Michael thought the septic tank for the Tin Palace's was filled. Skipper, of course, told Michael where and how to build a new one the old fashioned way, with stacked and spaced red bricks. Michael spent many an evening digging that 20' deep by about 7' wide hole and carefully laying the red brick mosaic. When the top was approaching, Skipper explained how you bring each successive layer of red bricks to the center of the hole to close it off. Well, standing over a 15' hole, on the red bricks one is laying, while laying each additional row of bricks a little bit in from the previous row didn't look inviting. No matter how structurally safe Skipper promised it would be, it took Skipper standing on top laying those last few rows to make this doubting Thomas' believe that he wouldn't fall into a toilet flushing hole.
A
few months after National Geographic ran the Pharm as its October 1969
Mud Flood centerfold, Glen and I helped Michael unload an old Wells Fargo bank
vault from the flat bed of one of the dilapidated Pharm trucks. This vault was
so heavy, or the flat bed so worn, that we put 6 more holes into its bed just
rolling it off and into Michael's bedroom in the Tin Palace.
One
evening, after the vault had been cleaned and prominently displayed in
Michael's bedroom, Scott Kerivan, another pharm hand, came upon Skipper sitting
in Michael's room. "Listen,"
Skipper said, with his ear pinned to the vault as he was rolling the
combinations, "I think I can pick the lock."
"You're
crazy, Skipper. You can't do
that."
With
a couple turns, the tell tale unlocking sound of the outer vault could be
heard.
"Holy
shit!" said Scott.
"Ah.
It's a double lock vault. I've got to pick the next one." Skipper said as
he moved on to his next mechanical challenge.
"God,
Skipper, you better not."
"Ah,
what's the problem? It'll be great
fun."
"Well,
maybe, but just in case, I don't want to be here." said Scott, who paid
little heed to collection agents or police officers but paid tribute to the
Castle's Head Janitor.
With
that Scott left and Skipper finished his fun. A few days later, Mrs. Freisner,
the Pharm's good witch, keeper of the house and Editor of The Shriek
pharm newsletter, informed us that Skipper had shed a lot of grown up tears in
the Tin Palace after performing his tumbler routine. The gnashing of teeth and
shedding of tears took place shortly after Michael discovered a suffocated
white mouse in the inner sanctum of his Wells Fargo vault.
Luckily
for all of us pharmhands, a good safecracker and a vault were not enough to
lock out for long Michael and Skipper's friendship. As with fine wines, their
fine memories of a crackling good youth spent together have forever locked
them together as friends. That... plus
Skipper paying a lock smith to reset the tumblers and vowing to never play
Butch and Sundance again...
Post Script: Skipper is that top flight engineer he always thought he was as a kid. Flour Corporation keeps him working on many of their important assignments. His wonderful wife and children have tempered his whimsical play times, but he still spends time experimenting with his own engineering ideas as he develops a large tract of land near Bullhead City as a continuation of his Castle Building forays.