`tbe`TOGGERY BOP` .. SJ92 ColleQ`e Ave.l

Transcription

`tbe`TOGGERY BOP` .. SJ92 ColleQ`e Ave.l
•••••
.
.'
.
.
p
.
.
FRIIJAY~ JULY 16, 1965
·YOL. 46 NO:-:4
(
I
28~5000
.SummerPI~:)lC::~rtain~oe~"yp ~frwo W.~k$
.Two weeks, We rehearse' and rehearse. .
One week and it cou~dn't be worse.
Thi-e~ (jays. Will it ever be riiJ.ht? .
~nd d~lof asudden. That big firstnif/1tt?
sorfed hours left before the 'curtain goes up
Costume d~signers mean,while work. on·
. on George Bernard Shaw's Major Barbara - a dress for the leading lad'y and a· coat to :
.' SDS~s Summer Theatre ptesimtation.·
be put in stock for other productions.
'
The director sits on a stool in front of The set designer .and a crew of two ham- ..,
the stage. Before her, two stage characters mer 'away on a set for an Edwardian draw~-:
The stage· in the Little Theatre is set' at X are going over tl~eir lines.
"
.' ing room.
..'
..
Minus Two Weeks .' . .. rehearse and re- . Pick up the pace, the direCtor says.. .
The .s~udents from the SDS summer thea- .
< ,Qther a~tors and actresses are 'reading, tre,·--workshop are' doing various jobs,
hearse. :
Everyone is still calm.
over their lines and ,discussing their own sewing,: painting, and some are· at re.
. (seepage 11)
..
There are, twelve days and several as- . interpretatio.lJ.s·Qfthe play.
Major Barbara, ., '·played. . by
Jayne . Skillman, finds that"
there. is something more to.
life than. to alleviate si~and'
suffering when she meets"
.poet~profe~s()r· Aldolphus,
sins,.or actor"
])ean' Sban- .
.. .
. , --._--_ _-_.
'-. '.::non~
' .
..
,.
':SDS-Prof On Hand As New Era Begins
. ",
Two annivers'aries of atomic shall Islands Chain of the North ,moored;in the harbor of the atoll. would be. Some .50,000 people had'
bomb ~xplosions fall close to~. Pacific. Bikini had less than' The first blast was from the air. been involved inthe test ..
. . gether. They serve-to remind tis of three square miles of land area Watching- from- a se~plane 30,000 When .the blast came it ruined
. two days when the suminer was before falling victim to the ex-, feet abov~ the blast, Sm~th and' the sup~rstructures of' the· ships
. just a little .hotte.r for two small peJ:im~ntation.ofman.
his fellow passengers were 'the .below but the shock waves above
.
The dat~ was July i; 1946, and. c}osest obServers with the excep-.· were iess than had been antici~'
segments 'oUhis planet. .
.Today marks t~e. tw~nt~e~h an- Dr.- Lewis Smith, now professor tlOn ()fthe ~om~er ~rew.·
pated..
.'
: .
nlversary of t~e first atomic blast, of physics at SDS was on hand. as . The· entire Island was evacu- . Smith observed that th shoc'k'
. . ~'
.
ated ,before the bomber took off
...
.
' . ' e.
.
conducted at Los Alamos, New
u~·
. .
t th b' b·
f a ~~~~~bst .. rom the N~val E~ec- from a base south of Bikini.. This waves hitting hiS plane from the
~lUCq.• prior 0, ..~_. o~ mg 0 tronles Laboratory. His Job was t o '
,.
..
' . . bomb were ·not as bad as the .
HIros~l~a Ne~rlya year ~~r ·measureshoc~~ffi~-~~~~L~~S!Ptlo~~~~~:.~ t '·en~·
the first atomic bomb was ex- .. '
, '. ,
. '"taken to secure the safety of t e
.
' . . . ~~ we .
plo~ed,. the United States 'con-' . The purpose of the' Bikini test. participants:
::',
the b~se,and Blkull. . .
.'
.
ducted another explosion·· most was to d.etermine how much dam- .. Everything·· went smo.othly,· ~e mean~ the phYSical shock
people remember. •. \
. '. age -th.~ A-bomb could do to' ships'i'" Smith said. Tests'hltd' :b.eenmade waves;' Th~ -emotional' shock·
. ' The place was Bikini Atoll a Several old· U.S. battleships arid 'beforehand ,to . determine' just waves continu'e to '"bit ,horne 19,
IlI'nall "nJOgl ili!lanrl in thp 'M~r- captured Jap.anese ships were what the effect. of the -bomb yea!-"s l~ter and haIfa world away~
.
~
.2...; FRIDAY, JULY 16; 1885
-,
, Edito;ial
..-
YIJ' .
r
·5DS - Architecture's'
Ldst.Stand
·:.el·-$
@ t!).~
.' Welcome to SDS' - _. the graveyard of' all college- forward:type lectures. But it never did,:and the studesigned architecture for the great state of California. ,. ... dents wound uP' staggering out ~it~ as .I~lank slook as
What we mean is that when a building flunks out of the building.
,'. . ." "
. the master plans of' all· the California state colleges,Then.came the n~w look<~-- ' . ,
" . . " .' .
someone says "Why don't we put it at San'Diego then.~' Oh Boy. 'We can camouflage the whole campus with
And so it js buried."
.' .
.
.
_all these arch-draped' 'buildings rope off the Main
'.We don't mean·.to ~ay that therear~n't certaln tpings Ar!!h··and p'retend it's just a- historical museum we
about SDS that strike our fancy. We've noticed dozens cotildn'tmove,"-and then .give the' HS Building back to
of quiet little. alcoves where one, c·a·n .stretch out on the the Army. "
.'
..
..
"
grass orbeneatli a tr:e.e~~c,-.:.." .. " ,-,'" , . ',', ;. ". ~,'.' ,. ...,
c: ... It .wasgreat until someone realized :that the arches
~.~B.u·titiitie~fgcit~tliEfbrjglitj(l~~(tjn~i:tiia=-f~lY~~!l~~~h'~'J~~W ~.~~f:.·~~.4:.. tb~..a.rc.he$ Qn.tb~L.n.ej\r.;library ..
-Duilifings ~foo~and==fronrtllen·on~·the-·decor~:-was·liever~·71ook about as much alike as Mutt and Jeff.. '" ,.. .
never the same.
., ' .
, ,.' ,~---......
A'nd the total c()nglo~eration ofarchitect.ural styles·
They started out with the SpanIsh style,' which was ~t· SDS looks like s()mething Picasso might have de.pretty good~ but was pretty· e:xpensive ' too.' It'snQt signed. in his eadY days . . . like' four .crossword puz·thafthe buildings,ar~ l"ess expensiye now,b.!lt at~l~ast, ~les s~r~mble~ tOgeth~r~';""'~",'1ike ~n orange and green
.' they.1ook cheap enough to keep the taxpayers from get:- hand-paInted be on a hg . 1 .shut.· " ..' , '
..
·ting upset ..' . .' '.
.
' . .' '.'.,
. 'Sometimes it's great t be ~Ii ordiriary clod "with no .
So then so~eb~dy changed their mind ...-or lost it ... ,aesthetic taste. Otherwise,' th~ feeling. we 'have, in our
and SDS came up with a new architectural style: If you heart fQr 4ear old 'SDS' would prQbably shift to o~r
c~.n call a cardboard box factory an architectural style. .stomach. . ,
.'.
'l'h~n t~ey start~4._naili.ng up all t~ese gigantic sho&. . Infact~ the way the. campu's is 'setup there isonlyone
boxes - ea~h with its 'ow:n simple,' efncient, ·no-. thing that doesn~t fit. We really hate to mention, it, but
·nons~nseperson~lity. " . ," .'--." . '. .
.'.
. _ we're kinda disappointed 1n the architect's decision to .
On~. ~coul~ •. al~ays ,'hop«: th~t t~e .l~ok -woul~' sti~u- . d~ thegr~ss an~ ~he shru tibery in green.,
.:.
".':
late professors Into ch~rglngln wIth dIrect and: straIght .. Somehow, we expected red.and blue.
.
. J
'C' ••.•.• •
•
n
,
, ."1· .
.
.'
.
AZtEC;·TER"~ACE . ::~~~D~~' ~9000
..
.
!
:
'.
..'
Call nQW".an.d make' your plans to enjo.ythe luxury of
Ai'~ Conditioriing.~ 'Wall to' Wall-Carpeting , "",,'~T_w:--o_P_o_o_ls_ _---,-........:-...,-···-;-
------- .. ,
.: : Qff~treet Parking~- .Compl,tely Furnished
'" y!alkinca' d.istanceto C,ampus and Shopping·.. ·.---.-- ,
-
. ·6~63·:MontezumQ
....
Rd. 463':4955
_",I. :
.
l
FRIDAY,JULY 18,1885 - 3
'
SDS W~r.,~~hop ~~ides' Counselors ;.
"
Most of, the' time, Robert Hotchkiss is a guidance'
counselor at KearnYHigh School. .
.
.But for four weeks this summer he will be. an em~ .
'ployee of San Diego Gas and Electric. There he will ex-
'Derie"ce-fi~st:~and~'mally.~f:th~~:::~:;::-'-,:,:,-
-,.>. .."'\"". "'., _
~.. _,
.' ,'..
,.
, entry ..positlons that' his'summer>staY;<','on .the~()b"'-..:to" evaluate
,employer . makes availab!e'to their"'experiences alid prepare a .
high. school ant-Juni~r ~ollege. report of their findings. that' will.
graduat~s~..
".
. ' be made available-to the county,"
Hotc~;:'is, one of nine San school's guidance centers. . . .
Diego ~c~flnty· 'highschool and' Hoover said that the counselors
junior' . college guidance' ,coun- went ti!rough the regular screen.selors that 'werf! seJ.ectedto par- ing proceedures that all new em, ticipate in the new:SDS, Summer, ployees for each' individual emWorksl)op iii CareerGuidance~' 'ployer are subjected. to. These
, .' Directing the new_ program are included the filling out of' appli,Martin Gerstein and Richard cations andjob interviews. Some '
Hoover,. both. guidance coordin-; of the counselQrs 'were given on. ators for the county Department .the-job-training· fo' better ac-.
of Education: '
quaint them with their work, he
"We are trying, with this pro- said.,
.
gram, to give~high school and The counselors, are paid $100
-junior college counselors a better for each 4O-hour ",vork they' put in
idea of what job" .opportunities
"on the job" by their employers.
'are- reallyavliilable to, their.-o
., . ,..
._-....",. -.'I
a coun-~'"
....
IS-,
"better':--c~c()unsel~-:
~elor .at' O'Farrell Junior: High 'otth~ workshop. .
'
,Hoover emphasized th~t the .students towards' a more .fruitful ,
who is working with Pacific Tele- Gerstein said that the .program program is a, co-operative. effort, Qccupationaloutlook...' , .
phone emphasized that much was restricted in its initial size 'between. busiliessmen andedu-, "This' would farnilia~ize them
guidance 'information is ,avail- this summer, but hopes to expand cators to moreeffectively-s'olve better with what kind of work is
,able for the college graduate, it considerably I in forecoming common" problems of jol;» place- -actually' involved in certain oc"but there is pitifully. little summers. '
ment .
"
.
.'
cupations," she' said. "So often
information ,for the high' school "Claremont Graduate School aiBoth Hotchkiss and Mrs~ Wil- now a high' school graduate asks
graduat~~:': ' " ' , ' !
' rf!ady has a program very similar
liamssaid thart'-e program is for a·'job"not.reallY having any ,
The group will meet for one 'to ours," Gerstein noted, '·'but only a beginning for, educators ide&of what he really wants to'
week following, their four,. week i~ is not quite alt extensive, aca-to uncover' the information that dQ.". '.
&&&&.aUl.o,
....
'. "Peopleare Becoming Things"
.By Bernard Cole
People'~re responding to:th'8!t physical proximity to..oth~rsbu.t , H. e said .that~ ~utomat.i.O.. n,. 'by ~ave got to find ~aysof inc~eas­
replacement by machines by b~\ have found ways of emotionally taking away ~an's chancelo w~rk~ng relatedn~ss In human. enc~.iningmachine-like, by becom~ separating :themselves from one and to be usefulj.. ,'has . l-:ft '~Im co~nters. We have.~? learn to
in~ ~hiJigs, Dr. Richard, Farson aQother~ Forso,nsafd." .
" noth!ng except thIS machme-bke enJoy our hum~nness..
..
said In a ledure,here this \V~ek.
. 'rhis. tr~Dd t0w.ard~· thlngness res.ponse...,
\.
\,He said the .~eha~ioral sciences.
Farson, dire~~r of the 'Yeste~n will"contm~e and WIll b~come a Instead of elilp!t.~~zlng w~rk cap help' solve thIs' ~robl~m o.f
Behavioral ~clences InstltQte In s~rioussocla~ pro~leD.llf .steps and usefulness In ~onnecbon "thingness", by applymg t~e SCI~. Jolla, 'sald ~~~ rational and are not taken to prevent It, he wit~ human, worth, so~emethod entific .met~od fOI: the first time
IntelI,ectual, ablllt~es . are. bei~g sa,~d. ,
' . ' . ,must be deve~oped.· ~y. which in history tp t~e huma~ condition., .
The Protestant-PurItan ethlc people can feel self-esteem with- .:
...., ". .
. taken over.. by, machines, and
these same emotionless qu~lities of denying oneself, working hard, out being usefu~'
The resultsof\ thl~ study' can '
are ,the ones emphasized in our and b,~ing useful ma~e this cou~-,
..., ~.
. then be used to "des,~gn appli~,asoci~ty today. . '
.
try gre~tt Fa,,:son saId; "~ut thls~hat can be done to c9unteract tions of'"~ehavioral sCle~ce which
This "thingness" 'has extended. outlook';',;lf it IS not. modIfied, or thiS trenf:l toward ",thingness?'"
will unlock ..the mysterIes. of the'
into our personalre~ations. p~o.; changed,~ill be the very thing :- "We h~ve to get in·tou~h. with soul and s~lv~ the probl~ms fac~
pie 'find theDJselvelJ in closer which will destroy our society."
our feebngs,'.' Farson said. "We inghumanbeinf(s."
.
I
red'uc.~
.SUMMER SPECIAL
----
.--
~
~
,,-
'. STUDENT 'BOWLING.PRICES"~ on
\
I
25~ALINE -
-·-'--------,~9A.M~;0
6 P.M.
.'
prices.
.',...
\
i
\
."
x.ro~\·~opy~n,8
50 ,to ·100 ~opie5' •••• ~.'.:~'. g e ~a.
over 100' copies ~ ., .• ~., •••' Ie ep.
n
).'a't.,~
t
- ' ..
.UN.IVERSITY LA,NES~'- ········;azt.c 5hoP5duplica'inlr5•.l'Yic._~
60fh&Universify
,"
.}
,S83~S4447
.
\ of coursel
"
\
4 ~'FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1965' ' '.
.,
"
...
-
SD.SSenior· Seeks
to Morally _Re-arni Earth
!
',f
,
By Jim Young, . .
,
to 'accept responsibilitY in the Nationaf:'Physical Fitness ProAnother speaker was Ramiro,
. , An SDS senior is spen,dingpart .home, in their communiti~s and gram .. Clark won the situps' c!>n- Priale, President of the 'Peruvian
of his summer -in a' program de- in the ,world. This is being done test and tied for first in push Senate. Other speakers include
.signed to morally rearm the throughsemina~s and":" practical ups.
'.
.
outstandingnewspaperinen,edu_
world.'
, 'situations, s~ch as ;1J..~~~p':~~,er~" .., .l~ ,~pening weeks of the confer- cators, public officials, former.
'This may sound like a tall order, drama,'physical fitness.
ence, which opened June.14, . communists, sportsmen, and
but SDS philosophy major Bill' Seli?,inars concentrate on cer- delegates-'have heard from such show business personalities.. Clark and his Moral-Rearmament tain places or certain problems. men as Ernest Henderson, Presi- Delegates'to Mackinac come
colleagues believe it can be done. For example, one group is wor~- dent of the SheratonCorporation, from alLover the U.S., and have
Clark is in ~ackinac Island, ing on an alternative to the one' Dr. Edward. Annis;, President of cQme from such " contrasting'
Michigan; at the MRA Assembly million students who .drop out of tlie World HealthOrgal)ization places as Japan and Africa, India
Cent~r. ,"Moderniz,ing ,~merica" U.S. schools every year.
' and a past president of the Amer- and 'Canada, Latiri America an,d
is the' th~me of, a summer-long Another group is working in an ican Medical Assoc.i~tion.
Korea; Europe and NewZeal;,tnd.
,conference ,in which 10,000 African seminar; These me
-d)
youth are' expected to par- women, arefamiliarizim;
ticipate.
' ,
. selves with ne'r s ' ftf;)'
frica;
II
The aims of the conference are and, U.s; foreigy:polic. hey will
'
three-fold. They.are to end moral, attempt to deve~op proposals t o .
., .
. ".'-.
. pacificism and give ,birth to. a be .sent to the State Department Alfred Hitchcock's "T~e Birds" .highlights this week's summer
4!ghtirig:c spirlt.:::. end;_~jal ~i9-..:-a:nd.1o.:th~~WA~te_Ho_use~_~.~ _______c-'_~ film s e r i e s . '
.
~_"''':
=hm.~~.tt.:.hiJ;th::~~Sri'B-ll~~d=no=pl~r~::::::~,;:The:matineebegins at 12:;iO t9day jn HS,lOO.- ----~-~~,;--- ... - . - '
~ijaFIs=ii~=a:~1r=11te"'-dl~t-a:fu¥-"'"'erat~ens-o-r--parbclpatri1g---·W--~The evening performance will I>egin 'at8:30'this evening in th~.'
ship of anti-God sc;!cularizers and .numerous hootenannies, and was Greek Bowl. Both presentations are free.to AS card holders. "give birth to liberty fot all men.
-a winner in two physical fitness
This Hitchcock thriller is about a mass attack of biras on the town
; L~ader's at Mackinac Island events. He participated in a pro- orBad-ega Bay. Rod Taylor and Su~anne Pleshe,tte star; ,
plan to accomplish their aims and gram designed to see if delegates
'
,goals this',sum~r by training at the'MRA conference could
'0',
Form
..
yout~ of America and the world measure up' to the President's"
.
11Th"e' ;'B·Ir''d 5 'St'rl,•k"e·SOS"
II'
'
, I .
A.·c· d·"'em.ec' .S,.o'c.ee'ty
•
.
_'
•
,
ed
"
, _A_Chapjer of Ph,i Kappa Phi, an honor society recognizing student,
scholarship in all areas of acadeinic study, has been founded at SDS.
~ SDS is -the 90th' chapter in the country and the sixth Californla '
College to enter PJ9? Members are elected from the top ten per
c~nt i~ class standing of juniors, seniors, -and ,college"alumni. Offi- :
cers
and'honorary members
will be installed in the fall. "
.'
.
. .
.
conege West Apartments
,544,5 55th' st.. '"
•
~',
.'
y .
583~784l
"~"I ... ",' i.
•
"'.
' ',f .
v.. .
",-.
~
GRAND OPENING 'SPECI'AL'>
.
cOMPARES WITH THE WORLD~S-LAR~E:ST-~N'D-M~ST
ELAB~~TE
.
.,'
• ADJOINING SAN DIEGO.!STATE·COLLEQE • VIEW
• HEATED POOL'. AIR CONDITiONING
•. ELEVATOR. PRIVATE'BALCONIE.S .
• DISHWASHER. CARPETS' & 'DRAPERIES
.
~. BEDROOMS 1V2'BA~HS
.F,URNISHED'
GARDEN HE~.GHTS MINIATURE GOLFCOU~SE
, " , . Second 18 hole
RATES '
... course ~ LOWER
.
,8900 FLETCHER PARKWAY - 3 MILES E. ~f CAMPUS.
.'.,
FOR SUMMER'
SESSION WE
HAVE VACANCIES
AVAI_LA8LE~'
,..
-FOR :'ROOM--, -_' __ I
.-
.MATES
.... .
___________
at only> :
- .',
5
.
:'p~r p~r.p.erson/per-mQnth .....
.UTI LlTI ES PAID
,
...
'.~
,
. ,
EXPIRES JULY 26, 1965
1oA.M. - MIDNIGHT
\.-
,',
.
.
'~".
FRIDAY, JULY 16, 1965' -T 5 .
"For Extra Fun - Here's "Sue','-- '.
Itfs hard to drive in or out of San Dlego without see~ more than one.'" ,'.
ing the caricature of a pretty. SDS Coed who's just- As 'one of her .rec~nt modeling assignments,· Sue
finished a modeling 'campaign for Coco-Cola.
.
adorns numerous Coca Cola bill.boards around town. "
.- "The G,irlln The Red Bathin~ Suit" '.:'" That's what .. For an 18-year-o~d coed, she manages to m~x '~odel. t~e ~d menj~t Coca Cola c~all her. H~re. at SDS we cal~ . lng.~nd college (ly.l~e well~ Sue ca~~ to SD~,I~st Feb.ru- .
her Sue Rose.
.. ·ary aftergraduahngfromPaclflc Pahsades ~ HIgh
If your eyes catch the billboards as. you drive along School during midterm. .
.'
.
Sari Diegq highways, you've probably' already s'een a H;~r goaJ isto teac~ blind~hildren at theeltirttentary
likene;$~,pf Sue, telling you that "for ~xtra. fun; have .education lev~l. Sue, who is an English major, said that
. . ,a
she' feels a real.desi:r:e .to give help~t(i),those who Il.eed.it
.'
•...
d.'''_
,most." .'
,
. .
"I'm ·also thinking about joining the Peace Corps~
but that· wouldn't be until I graduate.".
. .':
. Sue started her modeling'career three·summers·ago
when she took a .modeling course. Since then she has
modeled for May:·Co.~ General Motors 'and Coca' Cola
arid·
appeared 'oA several
afternoon
television pro, .
.
/
grams.· ' .
.'
,.
.'.
'.'
.'
'''I'm hopirig rll be able' to do some more work for
Coea Cola when I get back to San Diego," she: mused~
"They gave me fourc:ases of Tab, Coke and aubbleUpf"
. ·. A.!tighlighto~:(,h~~r'r car~er' ca¢Ef'near i~s. beglnni.ng
_.
.... ,mo'del~gschoolentered her In the "~ISS.~~.
:TeenU:S.A."· pageant. She finished t~~ contest~ which: .
lasted 10' days, as one of "its six ·£inalistschos\~Il'out of
40 contestants.
l
\
'.
.
While she'·s· been hpme fro.m college' this ·summer;
Sue has been working on ,a new love of herS' .- guitar
playing. "I picked ,up playing th~guita:r when I lived
in .Olme'ca this past semester~"sher~
.. ated.. "Several
·of thegirl~ thatlive~ in. the dorm got e interested in·
.it aild since then its been like an addict n to me.'
"
.. "I reme'mber one night,"· Sue recalled, "that''I was
f::,pUS~d forpl~ing my guitar. until one in :the m~rn~ .'
I,.
.
. '.
.'
'.'
.:;. "
....
:.
': ..-'
.
"
.
.
'.',
.
COURSE
MEMORY~.
Free. Demonstration Ses·sion
.
. . HOW
TO REMEMBER BEnER·
.. //
.
~
'
'.
*
Open to public, .
. .'nomes .......;,~-.....v."' ....__ ......,:.>. ~ ... ".,,~.'... Pi·
",
LEARN HOW to" .;.
Two Classes,
I.
. REMEMBER
Kappa'. Alpha:
:
~a:;:-.,~~:"rii~r:2~~
yocabul9ry
numbers
:,' "
.
..
.
·.e.. cts .--.-~-c~-~---- *
.;
--
obl
·'-.facts~
.'
h
/.
.....
/' .
speeces
!
•
·
.'
*
2-S·p.m..
- ...
Sigma', Chi
House
. beginning Thursday
iuly'22,7-10p.m. •
One' doss .per week
. ,for5 weeks. '
. .
'
'
improve study hd'oils
. concentrate"
.. listen· and take'~~tes
review.··' .
organize schedule·'· '
be mor.e
. . efficient
t
l
.
'
•
.
.
, ..
~",,----,---,--..•..-,.• ~.,.,;.....,.."......~~.........----.,',~••~.-41~; ~<. *,.Be~e~~emetymecmsiJettergnnte-S'-'·. ,. . . "'.._',"":".- ,'~.........,...~--...................,...~----I....I.
.."
Im~p~~ve.iol)~ffici!!ncYf:l!!~~~~tf:lLCI~c.~~t(Jnce .
_
.._-_._ __ _._.\-Steyeri,instructo~
- ..
*
..
_ .......
...
_-
......
..
". .
.
For further info, call 469-3680 ~4
.:...~ .....
. .Alec.
.
'Robinson School' of.N,leniory Training
•
"
I
_ _~._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _~
8 - FRIDAY,lULY18, 1985
.1 ,!
" II
'\.
j
"
..
fRIDAY.JU~Y18.1985 ~
,
/
It'l spring,
.
And' ev.rywhere there il the watmth of procreation. '
_,I.llgh,
.'
And Moth.'-~ature gentlYllghl with·me.
"'
..
I
BY GLENDA' STROUD'
.
·I'.,.sa,4,' .
A"d ·.v.rywher.1 .... t~e ·,gentle,b.ndi",g bCilCk toward life'l cradl •
(Till we meet aga i,n) '.
With a few morning dew'drops, ..
We met, I,ived, and - vanlsh.d into
. nothingnesl
I;)Ult wal the eonlequeneeof exi~t.nee
In which we I ived for .ach other.
DaYldriftedby, and thinglcha'nged,
Till moth.r naiure permitted UI .
. To meet again;
• Lipi to lips
On a window glaD. . ,
·'Wh.n the gardener IQ~ the dirt~
H. walh.d UI away with hil gard.~
hose
And buried ui 'in ,the garden •.
~. A tree'l I~ed' wal dropped in~o our
;,
dust". ...
.
'..'
.....
...Vlcki Adi~Sami
.', It wal another Chrlstmal,'i.---ihocked Arth~r, a; it
-alway. did, to real.iz·. that anoth.r year had m.lt~
, a~y, 'but th.r. wal na mlltak. about It., Th •.fragrance
of pine awak.~itd him, and the momln'g air wallo
...
crisp that it mad. hil blood tingle. .' But of. course·
....:...
,hef.lt no chill. 'l'-he'Ulten.d Intently, h~ could hear
carolers singing ~'Noel," hll favorite; ,Th.lr voic•• w.r. .
Fickle justic.~ brok.n.d~n.
."
.-,ovely, In perfect tune, but v.ry faint; Diltant. DlitanL
Batte,red b.ldam,funny clown, .
Inspellc•• Dllkint in time. '.
'
Grot,squery,
, , Before h.... hl.1 giaUeI on, the bony rldg. of hil .
''(our parody,.
nase, he looked off to the ealt and saw, 01 he knew he .
t'
would, a shimm.rlng. Chrlltmai tr••, and for an in·
ConlCienceborn in conjectur.e'l pain .
.stanf hll hyp.rni.tropia Vanllhed. arid hll,.vllion
! .
/
Heartbreak borne in p.rdition'l
game;
was 01 Iharp' and clear a. that'Jof a flv":'year.olct
.
,'The :sa",e ang.'1 adornedth. plnnacl. of the tr••,
a lottery. '.
. ,
, -, .
I,
_th.one 'he hadpuLintoplace whil8\.. hll moth.r
.
.
_held=hiiii:"up:' in.:h.i'Cli'nIJ~.lt Walitilll.t .at a crooked
-;,c Truth's performance nev.r defin.d.
_.-S~~~~~":=;'-i:":~~=~'~'~~~;~:~~"u~:~,~.~:-;~~~~~~:~;t{:.:~~~;~~~~(n~~-~--=--·~c~.
.
angl~~~~; ·Art~ur~~rt.iled,ligh~, c:lftd put on' hll
~themind'lhlrrided ally kind
glalle.. The tree dluoived,· a~d· the ~.nt of pin,'wal
And sCan-g
ofmoek.ry:
,
. era"" by that, ineffablyswe.t frag!ance which' 01Coo ~ Coo - Coo •
. ways pervaded the air ·here: Alnow·whit. cockatoo'
.
• •• AHMAD A.. AZA~MI
Fickle justlc.,.broken down
fliffed pait; vivid agai~lt the uncloudeCi blue'lky. '
...
,Battered
beldam, funny clow".
Arthur itr.tched and ya~n.d.A mango drqpped off
Grot.squery, , .
,
the tr•• h. wal standing beside and roll.d to ~is feet.
Breakfalt. H. picked it up and' ate It tlowly, chewing
Your parody.
/
and swallowing one bit. at a .tinie, a habit hi. moth.r
••• YVONNE ELIAS
had ingrained' In him all' thOle years ago. "Don't
•. .J.
'eat" like a ·llttle pig~ ~rthur,", Ihe would say. ''We:
/ a ,en't ~" ima Iii U By -:. the· tim e he' learned, In b I.a logy -:::::;:::~~:::::::::::~::~::;::::~::;~::;::::~:::;:;:;::::~::::::::;3:::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::!:!::::::::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::~:::;~:::::::::::::::::::::::~:;::::::.::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::~:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=:::::::~:::::;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::
cia.., ,that human b.ings were animall, after' all~
IW••t taste of 'It alwaYI lingered ~ on the tongue 'for' Ilgn of "':' of old ag .. We',. old, Arthur, you kn~w we
of clothing - for the agr• .abl.cqnfln.ment of a. tie
apples that talfed lik. cinnarnori.·
tim. in hll life be.n brave. H. ,had concentrated or
it wa.too late. By then Arthur couldn't eat like cihours.. Arthuilaughingly called it ambro!la. Oncelt~ are.W.-we'veJ~ltouryouthhe,.."
' wound tightly around hll throat and for a pair of
Arthur chrl.tened th~ plac. "Chriltmalilland," In, helplngtheonlyothersurvIVortosafety.- .,.'
gr.edy little pig if h~ tried.
.' \.,
"
had amazed th.m,butnow they took Itfor granted.
She put her ,hand I over her face and ltarted to
Ih~es .to.nca.. hll ~fe.t, which .ven after all t~se
commemoration ofth. date of their arrlvol, and Ev.lyn
. Once the .hock of the creuh and the novelty ofthell
"Dldyouhearthemthilmornlng?,'Arthuralked.
whlmper.Arth~rpattedheronth.shoulder.
years felt naked. Butthiidelir., Uk., hi' d.llr.s to
laughed and said,."So meday<we'lIb. writing a book , n.w .nvironm.nt had worn'off, Arthur wal fa.a bJ
, B.for. h. had conlumed the lalt mors.I,.he sc:iw',
"Of cou~e. They were linging 'The Twelve DaYI of'
"Now,. EV, ,don't cry. The,.'1 nothing to cry about.
read,~ book; to '1Ilten to mUllc,' to play a g~~e of' ~bout ouradv~ntu~el al castawaYI.';Arthur had ImU~
samethlng eve.. more f;!ghtenlngl unavoidabl.
Evelyn, approachlrig from her lid. of the island.
Chriltmal'.'"
Ev
bod"
Id
Wh
h
Id
b
dlf
colas.,'
h
•.
k.pt
burled
In
hil.Jubconscloui:
He
kn.w
it
and
said~-'
But
no
one
will
bellev.
UI."
,
proxhiil~
. to a YOUl'lft,"'IMng,
.br. .athlng f.male.AI
She wal smil.ing· and carry''·Ing·· lomething iii h.r.han·dl;
, .ry , y ~roWi 0 . , . Y I o~ we· ~ any. •
. . ,
..
"Noel.",
' f.rent?',
.'
.
" "wal eall,erforhlm toluppre.. these feelingl than it
. And h ,meant it. No one would have believed Arthur
If that were not bGd .nough, Ihe wal attractive, too,
, 'Arthut: qu;ckly.leaned down and rlrlled h~firigeri In
''The Tw.lve DaYI of Chrlltmal."
.. "Beca~le not ~verYbbdy, h~s to 'Ipend ci lifetIme
wal for Ev.lyn. ·Sometim" he felt sorry for her.
..
. ci:lpable ,of anything. more excltl, ng , than . playing
Women, especlc:illypretfywamen, scared him. The)
. the .trea,m. Then he went bac:k into hilJ;ut for Evelyn's
gift, the i~tricatelycarved W"ooden c~~ he-had work.d,
Thll '!'Ial' a d.bate they hc:id .v.ry year. They could . trapped on a God-forsak.n Illand - a dull, boring
He gazee. at h.r for a whil'r le~lng .her 01 Ihe had ' pin~hl... ~h. offic. where h. worked 01. a book•. , always had. H. didn't know v.ry muc:h .abouttiiem on for monthl. He knew that she would look lurprlleCl· n.ver agree abo.ut the Chrlltmal tree, either. 'Evelyn
old placewlth~ut~ Iingi. th.at~r, or Ihop, or beauty
.. looked 30 years b.fore~ H.e ~em.mbered th~t first day , keeper, he had conltantlybeen kldd~ 'about hll
only onit bf them, his moth.r, had ever understOoc
always claimed 'It had a star ~on top .indead of an
parlor _"
.
.
"
on the Illand. The.oniy lurvlvors ofa plane cralh lome- 'Ihynell and his· total',lack of the adventuroul spirit.
him, andlhe wal dead. But .he did kn!)w that the"
cind murmu~, "How perfectly 10'I.1x" when 'he handed
It. to' her, although over the years h~had pr~lentedan~~I. ~ pink one.
.'
.
vo.,.
"And without 'any winter, .o~ work, or'taxel. We've
where In the Pacific, ,they had manag.d, by helping
Ev.ryone ,kn.w that h.llved a'on. and that, allde from
w.regood glrll and baC:!' girls. And 'h. knew. tha1
her with no I~.. than el";en luch comb.; But h. enloyed
"And thelovelieltpackagel uDdei'neath.~~~"··'
\
lived ,a 1If. of ease here."
I;"..,.
"
" c , , ' .. each other.cling to flo~tlng debrli, ~get to 'th.I..land.. .a~ occalional hand of COrdi with some oldfrlendl, hi.
&elyn wal a good glrl~ Ihe tOld him ,10. At hll haltln,
" .
"No, there w.ren't. Not any." In hll' family;. th~y .
"I know, A-:t hur, I know/' ~u.:mured'Evelyn. She,
'Almolt the' first thing th.y did wal'to form, an 50S
only form of recreation wal 'reading a book. lbatwal
luggeltlon, they, dlvlCied the Illand In~, designat
making them, anyway.
'''M'rry Chriltmas, dearl" E'velyn callecho him.,
had alwaYI piled up their pr•••ntson a tabl. In the
plucked at !he grail. A red atd yellow ·Inoke.twlned
' signal out of rockI on the smooth whit.-b.ach - a lign
one reason he had' decided to go to Som.OC!, IUlt'to
Ing one lid. of It"hll" and the otherllde, "hers.~' ~
'''Marry'Chrlltmal, Ev." Arthur leaned' over andIlYln9room~"HI...mothe~.. dld~'f· approve of packag~•.. ' Itse~!. around"on. of her ank es~ and Ihe Impatiently
,"that had ~~nc ___ gon. ,ul'Ise"en by any huma!'.ye. but
show th.m•. He remembered the day h. bought his
Evelyn'l ambition wal to'iltarry Into boundl... rich·
kissed her on the ch.ek, and ,h. kissed him. H." . being sCattered on the fl";~.
" '...
Ihook It· off. But. then, think 0 what w.ve ml..ed. You
' theirs. lhitl,rpla'n'e had. b..n en route from Califor,nla
plane ticket. "",
.s, and, when Ihe'learned that Arthur wal an under
thrultthe comb into her hand.
. ''W.II, nev.r, mind. about that,'~ laid Evelyn. It,
~ere ItIII roung when we cam" here. You "might ~ave
to Samoa, flying along ~ frequently travell~ air route.
"So you ,. takln~ 'a trip, Arthur,'~ Smirks had said; : -paidbookkHpe ... Ih~ ,willingly kept to' he, II de 'of \h~
.1'Arthur," s,he purred. "How perfectly lovelyl"
annoyed her for him to disagr....
".
become qui!, IUcce..ful In the Wo~d. 'And I _ I might
But In all tho.. years, not a Ilngl., plane had fI~wn' 'Smirks wal his bo.... 'Wh.re you going - Dllneyland?,
. illand. She had worked hcird to become a IUcceis
H.crlnged.,.It Itlll ,exasp.rcited him 'that "lovely" .'
She. absently b.gan' p'uttlng~ he; long hair up, fix.' .have married lO~eone terribly, rich and hod a. mag.
ov.r; not a lingle '~hlp h9~ app.~r8(LQn1h~ h_C».rJzo~•. .; _...... Arthur'1 fellow work.~ "ad 'Iho~n th.lr appreclo,'
ful rftodel .... he, fac. and much of her flgu·r. adomec
wal the only com'pllmentary adlectlve In her ~abu.
ing It Intoplac.wlth the comb. She usually let It ,hang
nlfieent-home and, _ .~nd c~ild,.n."
,:.
Th. Itillne.. wal brOk.n oitly by the lOund of wavel f,all. ' tl9n of th'loke by laughing In ~~oru..
V,.
'no re.. than 15 adl In mCigazlries and on billboardl
,
.
'~',
'i.: down, becaule.Arthur liked It that,waYt but on holl·
At tlie l\'Ientlo,n, of children, tears came to Evelyn'l'
Ing ~h.sand, the''softgurgllng of the,ltream, and
"Uh _. no, sir," said Arthur. "Not thl.year."
coalt, to, Coalt.' Her,proudest accompll.hm..~t· WGI'' C
lary. ' ...'
"I'm glad yoII' Ilk. It," h• .JCIld, and manage . an
daYI she wore It up.
. .' .
~y'l again, and she reached up a~d touched hedaded
the volcel of Innumerabl. animals -:- allofthem harm/4.1 calU~lIy 01 Pet.rGunn r~chlng for hll .45, Arthur
televilion commercial In ";hlch .• he had appeared, al
pppreciativ. smile 01 .Ihe ha~ded hi", his tw nty.
. .''That looks nice,'! said Arthur~ Hi wal ad~lrlng. hili . cheek~ "
",
.
.
. ~ .'
'.,
lei. _ who 'shareci the Island with them. Ra,lnn.ver
drew a travel folder out of hll coat pocket and handed
smiling arilnicitlo.n, adverilsing 'a .brand of dandruff
~ond braided leaf belt: He tried ,it 0,., 01 01 r.YI,
own. handiwork. Each comb he made' Was better than
"How. old or, we, Arthur? I'velolttrack." ' .
fell,' Ac:old wind n'ver blew. There wal always, ~Ipe
It to S m i r k l . r . m o y e r llhompoo. She had"e.'; onh.r way ~ ~
. to; .atilly her that'it WCl,I the proper.length. He d Cfn't
·th.lolt. Evelyn smll-a. She loved to be praised. .
~'W.II, 1.t'I .... " Arthur scratched hll beard. ' ' W e ' v e f " , l t of lOme kl~d, and Inthe··de.p, ilear wa'ters of
"I'm golng'ther•. To - ah - Samoa."
'. modelling aolgnment at the Samoa' Hilton, forwhlcl
"Does It, really?"'She Itroked her hal; and then ran
been here sOmething like _ 33 yeci""today. ThCllt would
.the .Itream countlell varletle' of fl.1i samehow manage
. :rhat wal a ",om.nt b. wal to relilh all of hll.1I'e"only a handful of the belt models had b.en lelected
really need a belt to hold up his loincloth, but I 'nee
- totheb'PrOlIuctioh~~~:.ra:~:s~riov~rt ht' face,. 'f.ellln~t' IttheArtwhrln?,kl,el. "But
Evf.lhyn'l creat.lve 'Ia~iiltyhl wa~ Um. lteer
Jru!k. m~~~~~.:.~...;..,........-.--.- .. " ~ "'. .~~_~_..:....- 'ed-to IUrYl;e. ' . .. __. , _ : ; .
,..;.' ,~c.!i~d ~dn~~~~~~.!'chhaIQdnt.· B~! In~lrdled.IY , when 'their plane. had cralhed.She ~ad ~do I~tentlol
ha d one. een taug t
h
o til one artie., w cin.
I.
camp • • y gray nowl I n ,
ur·
. "Flfty.llx." Sh.wlped away, a. t.ar; "lluPPol. It'l.
. .' Wh.n they, had ~Irst explored t~e !lland,.~o Itrang. " tn. whb1. faeatrlg t.ne mm, He a never trave
of throwing all of thll lucce.. down tile y~II'I"rn
to .. me.k.· ...n a handicraft clall, Arthur pr~terid.d that' .
"Gray?"
~'"
IUlt al well we .aren't ,.scued:"1LOWLLlfLhaJ~c:d~~r_'_·_~
en, barely acqualnted,-,Arthur lost his Ihyn.1I a,nd . any place alon. befor.,. and th. thought of flying
faUur. Uk. Arthur., . _ .
,.
-he would feel undre..ed without o n . . - - - - ·- "Myhair:"--:------·--~-~-_u------m..~--.'
pa ..ed--ul by."'--.
'. .
..
Evelyn her fear In tlie d.llght o.f,.eGch-h.W-dliCoyery;;;;;;'---:t.rrjfl.;a··hlm~-Hinvould-gICfdly-havrback.~ut-lf-~e-"~-ThUll'they-k.prthelr-:-dlltance-from-one-another
, 'T~eyiGt dow~"~n'thedcirk ~,..rli'jpongy gr~ ..,
,. Arthur. lOoked at h~r Intently for a" moment,:.,r.
"Oh~' but I'd 'Itlll like to" get back there, Ev," said
.' pholphoresCent starfllh that lay on the beach at night,
could,. but the ,whole ·Itaff~ccol!lpanled· film to ,the
sharing meall- and conversation and nothing m~rtII
.. a' few fee. apart. ThegrOuild ,was atlll wet with dew,'
tending he hadn't noticed before:
.
Arthur Wistfully.
',.'.
lighting . their, VtOy,' ~ut' disappeared hi the dayti'1'e;
airport. The,. wal no ov.nue of escape. . '
.,
Each of them ~I confident thattheywoul.d· be ~
and bOth of the... ' brulhed thel, 'handl over It and
''Why yel - I gu ... it II. alit 1t'lItlll very beComing."
, He It~fI yearn~, no~ a~d, then, 10 wear a real lult
strange anlmall _ wild boar, and kangarool, that
Yet w~en the warst happened and th~ plane plu....
cued lOOn, a ~ope which never dl!,,~, Th.,., wa
"Becomlng.! Gray hair Iln't\beconilng - It's IUlt a
allowed th......lves to be pett~ and cam. when cpllech . meted Into the oc~n, he had,· for the ·flrat and only
. :
(continued on page,~
Ikked th.mo'ltu,. off tfl.l, fingers. Th. pleaicint~
'
,-'~-
My Fair Lady
,
,
o
"
,>
\
j
~
,.
•
l;.
~
, - FRIDAY,JULY 18, 1,985
':-
:1
,
~ I was beating the skins in the expresso one day,
r'
'Gre~nwic.h
Beatni'k
beanhrew: a bottle my way..
. ~ when iortle cool little
.
': I went out like a lightl; whe~ on comes the feature,
, :: i CUZ when I woke up I was facing some creature.
" A pile of metal on top of a horse. '
..7 Why it was a manl From Bedlam, of course.
: !decided;that Iwould climb up i,n this tree.
. ,~
'~Soonhiskeepe'rwotild find him and i would be free.
'~'~'Getest down from thy tree,': said thepoar IU!1atic,
, ;, Well, this ~cat didn't ~rgue when
but I'm getting out. Adios and.So Long!~
. he raised that big stick:
,~ He said, "1 be Sir Godwin, an'd thou art my slave."
Of
course, they did not like m~ grim attitude,
J
'"
. '
~, I decided
to
humor
him
so
he
wouldn't
rave.
B~t
I figured that this was no time to be prude.
.
.
'"
,
.. So we got on his nag, him still in the can,
'Old' Art told his.boys to get that young pup ,; .
,'~ and~e rode to a c~stle in a for dista~t'land;
lmeaning me) but the pooLclo~ds just couldn't get up,.
. , On my bottom were
blisters'
so
big
I
could
cuss.
Their armour was almost as thick al their heads~
.
~ To the manl saicj,,"Nexttime d,ad"let's take the bus.,
Old Art j~st kept ~creaming he wan!«:d me dea~.
: But he didn't dig me. He just wasn't hep.
B!J t I was laughing so hard that .fhi' the floor -:- plop
f ' ,
..
•
"'So we left on a journey up'400.step. '
>~I rolled over and over. tjust couldn't stop. "
, ' ':·f.i~w lots of patients. All dressed up real weird.
Bot, like all good things; my kicks came to an elld
~~a~d. they thought I looked,wild in my threads and my wh~n old Arthur the King c'alled the rest of his men.:
~, 'beard.
Well, things got re Ively rid out o~. ~is hands..
It was like the B atles met up with th~)r fans.
' , I was ~egirining to wish-,l was a home in bed,
:' f got to the top, not too willing, but able.
'When I. fig~re'd hat this had 'gon$ on long enough;
when one of the, nuts rapped ~e rlghto~ the he~~;, .',
, ,'; 'And there ..verethese cats at this big poker table.
,I'd"
'
..
'
.
""··"'I'a'~'
I
w~s
'feelihg
q'uife
t~~g"h:""""
..
'
,'.
'
"
hcippened:on.haik in Art's~p.-a.d..".'~_
~'Now these cat~ wer~:'aU"dr.essed like by b~y, in tin.
ma e up a p .
.
.~".
.. .. .
. I don'tknow;what
~____.
.
,~ __ . ~
.- '
Iwould be daring (uld, brave,~as i;~~ote~'-=-~ ~-:?", >~;~~~IJ~z wne~~I:w~t~~~y_~~~~~?.ngoslike :",-a~~::=-:c,,' :. I said,"What is the scene man? Whose pad am , in?"
. I would I~ap from th~windovrdaWiijo1'fii~moar,,,,,:;j'~ut1hel)'e'af aidn't send '~~.the expresso, taste bad.
,.~i'NQw, the big one they pegge~ him as Arthur the King,
,. I stepp~dto th~ window and 100kedd6wn a mile,
My beard feels real weir~.like, My glad .rags feel sad ..
=~::Allhe~said
was'''T~rriorrow, you die ~~th~thing."
,
-,..
.
. ,: Now I was a cat not around very long~ .
but even from there ,I'could sE!e the crocs smile...
Whatever has happen~d ~s there, t~ ,debate.
'It was daring, and'b.rave, and most. any word.
But I'm no more a beatnik~!,m now going straig/1/t~ '.
'. But this whole little deal had an unplea~anf gong.
~ "Now," (jon'f know which funny farm I om ,on,
,But
affer
all,
I
wasn't
a
bird.
• •• Don Learned
.
',"
.
i
1
.. ___ ." . •
Arthur's Cou'rt
'
.
---
:
"
.
....
..
,
./'
.
\
.
,
~:::::::~:~:~:~:~:~:~~:~:~:~:~:;:;:;:;:;:~:;;;:;:;:;:~~:i:i:~~:~:~:~:~:~:;:~:;:~:;:;:;:::;:::;:;:;:~:::::~::::'::::::::::::::::.::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::::::::::::::;:::::::::::;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::!!:=:=:~:=:~:~:~:'.
IOm.thing'about"'~he'atmosphere~of'ttie'plcice'that
shaped likea mushrooln. It startled him for a moment,
c9 me into ~er eyes. There had never l,een more than
Jcttpt t~em optim,stic.
" . . '.
but then he remembered.
,'"
..one; ,o~ at them~t, ~o<at a tim~. Now t~ere, were
~, At times, Arthur knew pure bHu ....; lYing In the sun,
, "Ato""ic, testing," he' reminded Evelyn. "They're' exp.lo.lons In eve direction., Within miriutes the' sky,
y,hlstl,ing',o: him~elf, watchi,n g Evelyn br.~id'her hai~
still at it."
,
except fel r q sm"", patch o!.blue,Uirect,ly over the i.'or play catch with 0'. chimpanzee; or watching 'golden
"Oh, yes. I'd forgotten about that.'"
,land, was.a brU ian.t blood red. The whole w&rld,
).ummingbirds' building" tliimbl,e~size'd nests," and
A f'
th I t
.r~·1
Id h d
d
except for tlfe earth 'on' 'which they stood: seemedtp be
" ,
,
.' ,
,,
ew mon s a er a s.ml or 'cou,
a appeare,..
f"
...
'.' .
" . ,
,"ewborn gaz~lIe.. Itaggerlng about on unsure legsJ
t .
th k f
'. ' ,
As
ft " ,
on Ire. Evelyn' cned and buried her' fate in Arthur's
o
1nd tigreuessleepily nur~ing'their young. ' ""
: . , urn"~ the s y'l , 0 crl~sot' ~ ~, ree;- ~ ~r ye.a~
, shoulder. Arthur shut hi~ eyes ti~ht, as 'h~ had in boyse
1
, '~But through.out the 33 years that heand Evelyft had
Pk.a'd f' ~gal. y-co ore . mthu. roo,.m "f~u s ksecca~~~ ho~dwhen frightened'by an~hing. 'F~r a few'minutes
-, ' .. ,.
•' .
.
In 0 entertainment for em, Ike Irewor s Orr .he
"
','
. '. '
Jnh.ablted
a --,
bothenome
notIon perF' ourt h 0 f J UIy. ,t
I was th' e on Iy manl' estahon
f ' ' / e v e. the
scent of ashes permeated
the air'
soon this
. chrll;3ma
..
.Island,'
•
.
.
r',
.
"
'but
,
il'ted.
In
Arthur's
rain,
Now
and
then,
the
feehng
t
d
th
.
f
t'h
'.
'1'
d
Id
th
.h
d
I
f
'
unpl.easant
smell
was
.replaced
by
the
familiar
sweet
1
_
'.
'"
presen e
em 0
e CIVI Ize wor . ey a 'e t
"..'.
'. ,
.
.came over hIm t at he rod been put ther~ for a purb h' d . d . ft
' d'
.. t'
I"
I
fragrance to whIch ~hey were accustomed.
•
1ou.
I'':
h ' f'
.'
f h b' k h e , " "an 0 en yearne so In enle y to rega n
,'
;
~e, , I'; some erOIC' ~g""e In on.~ ~f':11 e ~o I he
In'lome years' ther~ we~e severai explosions; In others,
Arthor opened his eyes. The sky had clidnged to a
,a rea - a purpose e w~s n~t u, I ng. ut t e
,;one at all:' They became another set of phenomena
violet, ~had~ and,' was fading to -gray> He railed hil
.feeling
a vOice
past
" W"h'IC hArth' ur ' an d Eve Iyn t00 k f or gran'te,
d btl"
head
and slowly looked arou nd·. a t' th e st ream, In
.,
d" wasII very
d" vague,
"ti Id and"h
I'd from
b the
k A
h 01i,
u QO ke d
'
:W~Y!l IIpe e I~' ' 0 . your s au ers ac; rt ur,
forward to, as.(l break)in the monotony of their lives.
which ,so many, kinds of fish s~am; ,at the trees, lade;'
)e.. would
amount
..
' the last dISplay.
."
'th
dl
"
f f' .
h
• ,'.
. ' , hear
. , . It saying, ."or'you'll never
.
. ,to
It had. been' several,' years
since
,~~.~~ ess Vf:mebes 0 - rUlt; at t e animals, two of
-anything." To thli day he shll slumped hiS shoulders.
'. .
..'
.
h k' d Th h I k d
'
.
- Th ' I 'b t d
.h Ch . t '
d' h
Arthur fo~..,d hlm.elf wondering If perhaps there wouru
~ac _ In.
en e 00 e at Evely~"no longer young,
e
er
;'t tl. ,Yt t~e e. rfa e an.°
b rII mas,; an \. anot e~.
never ~'.a,nather, one. That' would be a disappointgrown barren.
',
;,
,~ ~'~!\\~" l!IIe 0 ~ea~,per ti apsecause It waa, an ann.l. .
ment.
',"'"
"
".,.,
,
'yeraary, their long,"g for home always reached Its
"Arthur,"lhe whimpered, "now no one will ever
.L.
h
f'
,
,
,. He sighed and gripped Evely' ~'s thin, wrinkled,.
rescue us, will they?" ,
~.Ig t, C('nd for 'a ew moments they seemed to be
,.trcansported there, a phenomenon to which they had
hand. She s":,iled at hini, ;athe; Ii~tl~ssly, and then
'-~'Someone ~id, Ev," he. said, realizing it for the
lIIfo~n accustomed, as they, had to everything el~e. on ", gazed beyond him' oUf at, tKe sea:, Suddenly her face
fir.t ti",e. "Thirty-three years ago." " '
the,island,',
'
was trans~ormed. An' exprftlSlon' of' ch,ildis,h delight
. "But ~e're going to' die,here, aren't we? All along." .
" ,When they ha~, liv~d in exile for a little over two
ca~e over It,_ , ' . ;
"AII alone."
Jeqn, Arthur ~Qd one day found Evelyn Itari~g at the,
• "Oh,.'ook" Arthur, lookl~' She was CiS excited as a _- ~ -At-rtwll,hf the walk -~ ~ ,
. ' '~:-~~
II'
, . , ' l l t t l e g l t l . ' ' ' A purple, one I", Arthur turned and looked
g , y.
ed down. te> the I)each and
or,b:on.
at't' he' ocean. ,
.
.. ~,., ca.refully.~e_~~!'.a,:,g~c!,..thQ SOS sign into. the shape of
':, ''You're pal.• a, a ghost,:' hesaid. "What is it?"
,,
'
•• "-"~'•.-.....'~ ...~ "--','
, .
a cross.. Then they .sa.t dow!'i,and"waited for the' star'-.I~l.ook behln-d'you"~-Iook afthat;,~'~~~-:-::------'~'
, An e~ormDu, cloud was r.llng In, the west. , Then-, fish to come "out. There woo 'Id' b twO .
.'
as
:")..thurturned' and: peered out at'thes~a. 'A huge
another appeared In the east. And "'another,to the
uiual to~lght and the dol\' , ~ , Itde'l , many aft
"','loud, hundr.eds '.of miles, aYi~y b.l.ltclearly visible,',th A d tiil
th t th
rth
' .
.'
,l
pIns wou ,8QP out .0
"!
sou ~ d,n 1·' . 'Eanol ~r, , 0 '1 e nd~'
'd
t~4t.ea, and p.rform acrob~tics In the moo~light.
G ra ua y ve yn s ,sml e ..appeare and fecir
ro,e' up over the ~ea~. ,I~~,al Q, br1ght ,green and
They always did, on Chrit.tm...
'
d
:h..
"
- ' .
.
FRIDAy,JULy'16,()1965~
"'Kelm Takes Over As 'Activity Advisor"" '
Activitie$ Advisor Donald L. Council," rally. corillliittee, Asso-: .Besides: his many 'duties as an
Keirn graduated from SDS tv!
Kel~ is no stranger to SDS. An ci~ted' Men's "Students; he is activities advisor, KeIrn is con- .years ago with a BA in Astro
SDS al~mnus, KeIrn. Js . faculty co-advisor to the Freshman, tinuing. studies in Astronomy,· omy, and three years ago Wi
advisor' to the Interfraternity Sophomore·alid Junior classes.. '
-
President. of Sigma Chi.'
.
.
.
.,
-
working for his Master's Degree.
.
vi.ct.,JULY 141hru Sal., JULY 24'
,"tEbtttinbtt 1iJox
.mokin« Zamp ~......
I
.~
DIRECT' FROM BROADWAY WITHIHE NEW YORK CAST.,.
. \ . ·Tb.e Pulitzer Prize MiJsical Comedy,
. '. ~,,\\"'~m.dA13I:BVR_~~·.
~ -.,. . ..
~~" ".'
.
\
J..+
.
In AZTEC SQUARE/.
-C9118g e' Ave. at Montezuma' Rd..
286~3.622
- . '.
.
.
fr
"
.
'.
.
.
~
.
.
,
,l) -
.
.
Now. Announces Service lit
LIGHTER~E'PAIRS
". ". *Chrisl.er .
.' ~Evans---·
-: .-' -:--*8ea
.' . ,
--... -_.
.'. *AII Ronson'Model S~:~--;·------"-"-"--·--c·-"·--"-;-·"-:·-·.~-;
"'<~
. :.
______._____.______._..,:. ;:"L
. "
_.' Open -tOQight .~-·Mon. tiIl9p.m~.
~. ~ / _Oth~'r days till 6 p~m.
\.
I
.
,
.
\
",:Ca.p"'us
•
: t ' .,'
. J
t
, ".,',Dry'c:leaners" ,
SUMMER SPECIAL~ '"
.
..r.nm/
'.' -RONNIE WELSH. JEFF'D~BENNJN6
, . • ith MAUIEEJI AR11UR'SUZANHE MEHKE'WlWAMMAJOR
PAT:.MCEHHIS·JOE COWAN' TOM MTT£H·l.lUAH FJELPS'FUI),'NNN£1T
(Good:~hru July 24, 1965) ','
'
Sweater.s
'.
(P:lain)
\
.'r- .... -- - .... .
Mon~ tbru
Thur•.EVI.8:30: $5.00, $4.00,.$3.00~ $2.~
Fri. 'and Sat 'Eve, 8:30: $5.50, $4.50, $3.50, $2.50 .
Wid. ··and 'Sat Mat ·2:.3b: $4.00, $3.50, $2.50,$2.pO .:
.... r·.:. .
-~
"
-.-.'
'"
. ' ____-_.J
_______ - . ,
. '
•
III" cIIIl:Il PQibl~ IIId ..llIti CIIII nlitie, CGmmu..1tJ CoIIcoiru, '
-'- -'- -.- - -_._ .... -,.
...
,',',"'-584.'Montezu•• RcI:
-;.1
-"
~
• TiCKErS NOW AT BOX OFFICE ·AND.ALL AGENCIES
'. . . MAIL ORDEkS GIVEN SPECIAL AnSn'ION .'
.'-'-~---
).
.
'.--
T6is ~-oupon must b.e· pr~sented with 'garments when ieft ~or cleaning. '·1'
.~:
.' _. (Void if presen.~~d.atti~e of pick u.p).
...•. - .' .•
.,'
,
Good, seatslIvailableali sections, .all performances.
~
'1
J- ' ,
!
A. DooIItU., IInlral Dlrectar . , .
-
.(Plain)T
-
ABED.' -.
.'
·IA ..
,
Skirt,
.. --, -'='-iiliii- ,
~_ ~by 'BOB FOSSE,. ])iNCWi.,
.
.
•
__ .>.
PrntRbd fIr.tII. Grel" Jijllm:e AllcicrltlOft,JI"'"
..
•
f
I
•
,
n·Aztec Sauar.,
,
, '.
',1.'
.nclOllIllf-addnl~. ltampeel ~m
'
..PI,
.
..
.
,
,
CIVIC
THEATRE
Cor.1MUNITY CONCOURSE.
-- ---- --- -- ·-··-·:--;-----:i '. ';'--:"- --". . :','
SAN DIEGO
~--.-.-.----
..-
•
2:3t>-b~)l{)
.-~--.
. Faculty/Staff ."StudentTickets
$2.00 with Sa vi rig Certificate
..' Available free at Bookstor., .
-I
,
-'
,','
.....,
, ,1ijl"-, FRIDAY, JlILy'11, 1915'
/
,',Viewpoint. '
..
...
I,
r'
I
munity should mean. The results of such a '
series of questions involve the many public,
whose tax monies support the University.
Insofar as these ,publics become uncom(fortable at ,examining ,issues whioh they
have not wislfed to' heretofore examine,
they react with vlfrious postures ~f defense,
wishing to punish .. those gadflies which .,
would distrub their dream of'unea/sy comfort.
, And the most uncomfortable issue which- ,
the Free Speech Movement ha's brought 'to' "
our attention' has been the dual questions
. of man's relationship to bimself.anii tb1his '
fellow-m.en.' ' "
'
. ' IJ ,1," . ,
, " In a highly, industriaUzed, urbanized' ~o­
ciety, we 'play a serieso~ roles throughout'
our live's (students, faculty, administrators,
factory workers, ,Negroes, whites, ~ain-:
tenance ,men), none of which ,encompas~ ,
the whole of our individual personalities. '
We may ~hoQse to define our individuality
solely in terms of our roles 'or we' may
choose to endow those roles with the stamp
of our individuality. To become the seiC
that one is not at ,all synonymous with seeking identity, inside ongQing definitions of'
social'roles; -
Our Stake I'n' FSM,
, h"'~
," ,
".
.
By Dr. Stanley Crockett '
Assoc. Professor of Enllish
,
d,< T,he series of events known as
;$ji~ec,h MQ'V,ement have provided
the Free
a 'host of
.otfservers with ample opportunity to give
,.',voice to their ,Il!quirements' as to what the
, :definitions ,of a university ,toge~h~r with
, "its"'relationshipi to a varied public should
. titt,
' .,,'
, '
These definitions have ranged, indeed
,,.gec:I, ,from one end of. the opinion spec. truro to the other. We have heard, on the
" other hand, that the University, and by the' .
'University is meant any s~te-supported'
lUIher, instJ~jj~n.:otlearning, is, nothing,
,iIiorirtJiiri" a supplier 'of prepared talent,
,'~ent prepared to maintain the official
~finition of American society.
'
': .•~uch a definition ~ay be summarized as
~e status-quo oriented society ... the "I've
: got)Dine, Jack, why rock the boat?" defini,,tion '. of America~ Readers. of local metro.pb~itan newspapers have alre~dy become .
Alequainted with ,such a definition, such ai, "
.:4enmtiOD~·such.a: point ofview~ '.. .
'" '
I
~_~}~~I(U1~¢~~i-nd,.the:Free·Spe.echMove. _. ___
""'meilt'lias beep welcomed by another popa- ,
.
'edge, ,-it is not the· case that this iathe'oniy""
,,'b~~on-·of-observers-"as"a·healthy reaction for those stU:dents who are expected to pe
definition of what it means to be a stUdent. "
,~~n altogether too restricted view ,of the ,tomorrow's leaders. ,
'.
' It does not'even necessarilyfollow that thiIJ
",l;1;q.versity·and its relationships to AmeriWhat has been too often forgotten; is that
is the most viable' deffriition of what' it
~.•~ society. Tt,e latter observers wOUld
education also .involves a tough-minded apmeans to be a stUdent.
..question'the assumption ,that the public' proach to the flaws existent -in the cultural
Confrontation of orieself and conrtonta,xtemal to the Universityown~ the' Uni-' inheritance, the gaps" if y.ouwill, between
tion'of another caUsfar risking that which '
ver~lity in. the same fashion as stockholders statements of value and actual·conditions.
"onehas' assumed ,to' b~ true' in order to test.' .
, o.wp ~ corporation. '
It is the latter aspect of education that
truth for oneself.
, .' '<TheyW'ould tend to agree with Chancellor form.ed the priina~ field 9f interest for
Such a risking, such a ttuth~testing is
,:~~klin;Murphy of the Univer.sit)7 of Calia~.raci1lty and students at Berkeley. This
revqlutionary insofar as it· leaves 'one's
knowledge of self, otb,ers, and the world in'
, fOl'4la at Los Angeles who argues that the concern of education articulates. 'with, the
c~~'tive tension, between the University experiences of students who have been in- ' . doubt. But a .. scholar, a':stiident is one who
19l0·the commu':i1ity, calls fo.r a constructiye volved WIth civil rights (and why can't we
doubts and the seare.hlight of his dou~t
criticism oC's status-quo society, a critl- ,simp~y say "human rights?") causes in the
illuminates everY single assumption by
cism that may well be turned upon t6e Uni- South as well as in California.
.,
,
~hich 'Jhe 'majority of .men·' uncriticaUy_
v~nity itself..',
'.-,
",:::-Students and faculty-who have been in.lve~ 'j~
, :~here is"of course, the view expressed volvedwith' civil rIghts exte.rnal to the
The Free Speech Movement has raised "
tlia! CommunistS were behind the Free ' campus tend not to be fooled by the lack of
the questions of confrontation and creative
Speech Movement.,' Such a view is a matter.' those same civil rights on thecal}ipus. , ' .
doupt. It bas challenged us to not settle for
9~~m~' interest tQ.. Psychiatri~ts insofar as
Th~y are suspicious ,of narrowly-based , the.' easy answers to difficul~ qU,estions.
_tsIJYs far, more,·a:bout tt,e ,personalitY sys- 'student" governments, which seem to talk," Whether or. not those of us' whoare;mem~ ,
tel1l of the observer than it does about the only to 'a limited ,'spectrum of the campus
'bers of- other academic' communities will '
~~lJerete facts of the case; " ' , ,"
comm.unity. They are suspi~ious, too; of
broaden the, scope Of'OUF-c'onfrontation and
"l::rhis writer, greatly concerned about what mass tecbrilques of education which result , deepen the, intenSitY of olii- doubt r~mains
w,sr happening at Berkeley as compared to' hi an, increasing, feeling of" alientation to be seen. ' . "
, '
~
WAAt was being,reported locally, spent one ,'betwee~.and ·within' student and, ,faculty,
The'BufDeReport,sspeaks forthe need to
~,~ on 'the,' B.erkeley campus' and ,hi the' member.
' " " , ,' . '
,decentralize, the affairs of· the University
community of Berkeley.. Residence with one., 'They are ,.men of principle and partially,' of California. At another' level of, thpught
of"the leaders of. the Free Speech Move- because- ,they are men of ' principle they
one might wella.rgue that there exists.a
9.1ent, attendance at several 'meetings of the .realize that life here, and now is'representanee~ -to decentralize the level of our' in-,
,'t~aders~jp, of tb.e Moveine~~, and conversa- . tive of what people are. Their ,sense of
volvement, as men, to, reclaim the definltJ~ns With fac,ulty at Berkeley tend to" optimism about the futu~e, is based in the
:,tions, of self which ar~ too easily accepted
~egate' the opi~ioil that the Free Speech - realization tha.t the future is shaped by
from others, to look at ourselves' and at
.ovem'ebt r~presented the ,resul,tof"com~", the ,acts..of the 'present,· not wishful\think- ,~thers and to ask who are we alid where are'
;':~un~stic machination's~"'"
'"
"
"_
'ing ,that hop~s for change' somewhere after ' we going as individuals and as a people.
. .~Instead; what emerged from on-th~spot graduation. And they are especially. sensi-,
'Such questions are disturbing, yes, they
observation, and ,exhaustive reading .is a ., tive to the impUcations'of that point of view
are also 'pari'of becoming an' educated man. : ,.
picture' of .quite' legitimate concern, with ,\Yhich argues that the University should
And the sense of disturbance' one feels toile functions of the University and itS rei a- give its blanket approval to d~finitionsor gether, wit~' the courage to fac~..Jm§)"'4i~
t~pn.s,to.Jts Rubli~~,a~~ 90tspubUcs.'usociety whi~h.re,forwa~ed.by~highl.~~yocal~.... t~·rbaneenml~onie lo~grips',with it, is a '
, .::It 'ls, of course, no news that ,the Unir specialinterest groups.
, ,
large part of what the', complex' of events
versi."" as the outstanding-example of the' ';- They el1lbra~e Socrates' dictum that "the
knQwn as the FreeSpeecbcMovement.is aU
instltutlonofeducation"has as one of its, unexaminedUfeishardlyworthUving.':·"
about:
,. ,
' r '
~jm,ary ftJnctionlf the .. pafJsing ,nof those
Tbe'....results of their examination has'"
'; And·thl,s, af'tet..allJepresents-the.ereat!ve 111
aspects of American and international cui- been to throw into sharp focus thectuestion ' tragedy of what it means·to become a huitlan
tiK. whichare' fe!t,~ be valuable learning of what being a m,ember ofa university com- being. '.
'.'
n
-
•
e
e, ,
'
I
,
•
I',
..-r...
",'
•
'
',.
.
" .'
.: ,"
'..
~
~
.
'" ·,FRIDAY.;JiJLY.·i8~,1.865 -i~
Su-rnm'erPlay'Rehearsdts (;0;«5.,.··.····· ~~
'-,'
~~
.
.~ .
',... .
"
"
By John Gilmore,
",
, .
Major Barbara, described by "tradition."
" ,
Bruce Al>ramson . has ,'been ; rich,' very 'culUared, and ver
, director ~riscilla' Allen war on Lady Britomart played by Dana humiliated . ,~nd ,h~rrassedby bored . with everything is.playe,
on joyous' ove ,"will run four Adams puts",·things out of her other~,about his father's "un-byMarshaHouchins.,',
.'.,
days, starting July 2 nd running'mind she doesn't un~erstand.
speakable" _business" that has .·dharles:LQmaxpi~Yed by.J~h•
.through July 31. All performances' That's what she did with her. drawn hi~' ip,to,a shell. of "shy' Schak is·:$({:;"ii1Uddle·an4.emp~
areaf8:;JOp.·ni.'
"
husband, Undershaft.. '. ~,,'
compliance." '. .,'
.
hea,~e~"Jbat,ilDYt:hing:he, has'~~
Shaw ~~astounds" the social- Stephen Und~rshaft played by Sara Undershaft .who IS' very sB:Y ~~,.~fq,(),.c~,n~eqq~.~~e~.:•.' ~;~
ists . and ,reformers };)y. saying
Morrjson~, pl~yed:.by .Jtolf· Le~~
'something nice about capitalists.
is the traciition'al and verY proP.El1
T~:·¥~"'ital.stiri "this .i~stance
English btltl~r. '.,", ' :"
, :, ::': r .
is amunitions manufacturer.
. '. i:UchardHoffilian~as:BiIIWallJ
The capi~list's favorite daugher. bj'··a
8,rid,bullyam
ter plans to wed. a professor ,of
his"flglit'.and"'stri1"le"agaihsftl~
greek -and .together they~ save
salvatioil'and.coDversion 'is ;Oft4
souls in 'the slums of London
of the drsmat'ichighpoints in'i,bl
through the S~~v~tion Army. "
play.,
'
. ~(;i
" Ralph Joyce wUl play Andrew
. Frank Rutherford.as,sno()#
Undershaft, a cynicalmuliitions
' Price is cast as an' unenlPlo~
tycoon "who never.,has .~p~~Per
painter, a .craftsll'la.n. H.e che'~
. thought withotJt giving- an' '. im~
the Salvation A~iy'~/I} order~
proper reason.'~
get free meals an o. glng., . . , ,l!()
Unde~shaft' is described, as'
'Dianne Jammeson as 'RuD1~
unashamed:-,_.in .his ' motto ... He
accepts moriey from·· any,:'so'iirce
--:andforany cause. .
..," ...,
1--'-1t>ettE.~r. ,
. . . " ..' :;.9'
'-~-""~Majo~"Bartiara;' who" sees--ber
Beli .Harrison as Peter', Sl1irl~
'mission in life to help "allevi'is a·' poor but': paln:fully,;' hOn'~~1
ate sin and suffering'"from those
working ~an ,t:tlat Shaw Jnelllde'(
. Jess fortunate than herself; is,
.played by J ayne Skin~,an.
. to point up the need f~r- a' S~ci~'
.'ISt' SOCle.
. ty ," '..
."
. ,,;., , , '.,J,1
, ...
Whe~ 'Barbara di~overs- the
.
Gail
Felt
who
plays
.
.Jenny.
~~~
Saivation Army knowil,lgly aca young andover-workf!d Sal:~"
cepts money from s~urces as .a
·vati~~
lass is the true a~4p~~¥'(l
whiskey distiller, ··and from
tradl.tIon ofthe ~~y.
. .,'~"~
her father's . profits from w,r
.
Mrs.'
Baines
pl.yed,
/by.
P,Ja,rt"'t
"
d
'....
erty'
-her
"idealist"
an " pov
," . ,
.
Heuer is.8' commissfoner .ilI
view of the Army is Shattered. :,
Salvation' -Army who reab$t1 .
. Aldolphus Cusins the, poetly looks at th~ n~eds of thea j .•
professor'of Greek. who
.
. in order tocootinue ,its WOJ;~. "i;~1
the SalvatIon Army to strengthen
'. Bruce' B\rkemeye( a~:, 'B,~~iijij
his relationsbip' with Barba~a is,
.plays a well fed, content. \VO~~'I
played by' Dean Shannon. .
.
at one of- Uridersh~~~'s m~l,lltlqJ!'
He hates .~ar, rebellion, and
· Sheds~
, .'\'
'
;' .. ,!qq
abhors what· he calls ''the money
, . '''Through his .e~k~'iJlely:lnl~~
hunters, the .pleasu~e hunters,
esting characters _rid -the ii:edttc
. . and the military promotion huntpreposterous .sit~'ation$,·. ;- shii\C
ers" and·' when destiny' p()int~ .
makes .it 'clear. he 'believes" tft~
: 'hi~ toward Undershaft'~ .busi-·
· S~lvatio~_ ,Army' (>r~ ·a'ny gtbQP1!~J
ness he' reveals. be can inherit
; indiyidual:s' .li~~, )nem~who,. mali~
the business in the Un~ershaJ~
poverty, and ,"suffering ·. ·s~e'm Ulie
, '.' laudable' ~b:t~u!lJJ·do 'not .have; tfi~
rigl1t vi~w ofUfe/' '.' '"
·W.l,;
reaL-rumili,
c,
t
•••••
.,.
c
J
1
,
. . ,.J.
..,.... " '.
'. . .•.. fOIt ~Lf.oR ~EASE "
. ",.'
' . :ra:
.FACULTV '. f;:U$TQM :. 3 .Bedroo~ plui fi ii
" ltudy: I", garage, 2, bathl ,Cit",.· and '
. ,-~had. Tr••s; 'large' 'lot - Ideally 11 {
. I~ated4. "'klffomS.Ei edge afC'om-:~~.
· ,'pUt•. •
.~
All NEW MODE,l
. ,sns .
Flrllpla~"· OroP~Ii: ~ard~ '1f~
.' . floori .. Exce.tlent n~.hbor.hood. '- ,2 ~,ktr~. ,.
·>to ',.Ie"'e"ta.'Y.lChOOI.·. ASSUME f.HA· d
... ~OAN:. (2$ yea;') ()·':....eA$E fOr ACad.m~((tj
'. Year::i ':'.,".:'
.-..... ~ ,AIle'. -'fIC'.r.~~'
Phone:582·486~
,I
.'
.
',.
,'~.
:..',
."FijrriUhecf3'BRHOUSE ~
,'. " :'~~'~:;':$:95\a,~rnontR<"~
Bar.bar~~ ~dthstand~ th.e .t~u~nb(~f ':\' . ·/W..iti.Ti-albpald
CalijtJ!UlitL . . . .. -IAYN~SP.EU;MANi-a~Major
Richard Hoffman, in the role of BIll Waler (Top). ~ha.rl~s ~()."
.. , 'Nop:e".,UlloekBul'
max
as
JohnSchak,
and
Dana
Adams
who
plays
Lady.
UrIt~'YfetPltY71Ju."E1cajon .
WAREHOUSE SALES
.. I.,. "~WI~~"." ,~,",~:_"~'O" nOM f ....,L ..: . '~e~ 'as they appear iii th~George BerJ].ard play to ru DJuly 2~ ...
-....,;"',,,!:s_.ee_'__
I ·"_·~III!IJo.l~I..
~_~_'._·nclllib_e_~.
12":" FRIDAY, JULY 16~ 1965, '
,
"."
,'.
,.'
,
***************************************************************
.,. ............. ANNOUNCING .. . :,>-'. "1: ····r·.' l·U·g.·
•
.
•
.
•
.g-tf
.· .' . . . . • ' ntt :_···. : .
n
'.'
. .......~
y,
- ,.
.,
....
.
-'~'
' .
'
'
~..
. . '
11 .'
ANNUAL JULYCLEAiiANCE
.,
.
0
"
..
.'
.
..'
'.. .
:>
,,,.....
".
..
' . . '
.--
-~
.~ '.,
.
.
•
. ...
•
.
. . '. . . . . JULY 17 'THR'U' '31' .' '. '.
**************************************************************
~~.=~. tQ .~ .OFF . .• .• '. .• '_~-~':~-='-_:=-c~:~-=~--:,,-:~::=-~~~~,.;;c~-~~
SPORTSBIRTS-
. ..' ......' .:
'~DRESSSHIRTS' ......
.".
..
SPORTCOATS' '.' . ·.~ ~ '...... ,'.
.SWEATE'RS ..'
. . · .'
•
.;
• "J
' . .
.
.
,,\,
.
SLAC,KS .'. .' .', "
.
' ;
.
~
,
.
.\ .
l
,.
TIES" ... ··,'··
.... .
WASH . NTS . . .,.. . . . .
I
,
.
..... --.----.....-------.
--..
,,'
',".
--~:---·-·-:!-i'-
.'
.,
"
•
. -... -.-
.
..
.
.::::........
~-
...
f
--
..... _:.0<
' __ ~_.'
'.
_,
.-.-:-.-t-;•• ,~-:...-... ~
.j
,;
'tbe'TOGGERY BOP' .. SJ92 ColleQ'e Ave.
t********************
l
:
' •.******'****************'iil:**************