Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 May 1951 — Page 17

, 1951 ; : i: Outside Indianapolis Old Schoolmate Is ° “ae * - i = * NEW YORK, May 26—-It was a penthouse it’s in Forkville or the Bronx, the goal of youth . = cocktail Party and an old high school friend Is the same, | . 2 Invited me. In 15 years 1 had seen her twice. Don’t let anyone kid you that it can't be | : SUNDAY, MAY 21, 1951 4 PAGE 17 = High Sen years ago this girl left Hammond done If you have the right stuff Many of the , AB . - - g lig School in Indiana hanging on to .a tail people up there didn’t start in Radio City. { 2 . : > + z of a meteor. She was Junior National and Colonel Story talked for several minutes with ‘U.S. A.: The Permanent Revolution'— : y = Middle States freestyle swimming champion. She an orchestra leader who left St Louis a year = was voted prom queen. Her classmates voted her before he did. g the most popular girl in the class of 1936. +> oo @ 4 y = A year later I graduated and was thankful I HAD a chance to ask my hostess what the = Just to get out on schedule. I hung on to a secret of her success was, She laughed about the ® @ = Serar hl paper dost was handed me and started success. She doesn’t think of herself as a success. = 0 look for a job, She works hard and must continc to work hard. oe a. hkl w ; s Success has taken this vivacious and ener- “I can tell you oneything,” she said. “When I EDIFOR'S NOTE: Here is a new definition of eg 2 : i ; Sa a H | getic girl by the hand. She has her own started my career I never forgot that only through | America and a warning of the urgent challenge it " pe syndicated column, has had four books pub- friendship, interest and understarding of people faces. v ; a) 3 2 ned and another is on the way. She's traveled could 1 hope to move forward in my work. And This Is the frst of 12 articles Jrom the. book N Ss : all over the world and next week is leaving for I stress that word work.” ‘v. S. A.: The Permanent Revolution, by the editors w = Japan and Korea. Oh, yes, she maintains a Before she had a chance to say anymore, the of Fortune magazine, in collaboration with Russell a = penthouse, a dog, several birds and a garden Ruarke and Mrs. Vogeler arrived Mrs._Vogeler, WW: Davenport. Si - high above New York streets. an attractive blonde, was friendly and appeared Just published by Prentice-Hall; the book is, in . = ip al Hew Be x perfectly at ease. : : - part, an answer to the Communist upsurge, and, in g ooill PE NRRL TES rer meni oe aha to Bob Ruark fntroduced us. ‘T askéd how Mr, = "Part; am analysis of the rofe Amora mast playin. E expect when I walked info her place. She said VOBEler. was gétting along. Mrs.*Vogeler said he Shap the Worl oF dhsoxsiany > E a few friends were COMING OVEr: “SHE. Wiki sds wan getiig along well. She knew he was because Mr. Davenport, a noted writer and editor, was = to know all about my trip to Europe, where I he was beginning to organize her activities again. chief of Wendell Willkie's research staff during the - was going, what I planned to do. We didn't get He was ordering fresh flowers for her and show- presidential campaign of 1940, and was Mr. Willkie's E a chance to talk much. Her friends were arriv- INE great interest in his family's future. personal representative. s Ing. She was the hostess. ’ AF THE wl 4 nv ov . CHAPTER ONE - It soon turned out that I was kept busy present time Mr. Vogeler is working a i ; istny = watching her dog Fatso so he wouldn't Be into ON the details of their Colorado vacation. He is | HERE COMES a time in the history of 2 the small ham sandwiches on a low round table. °¢cuPled with fishing tackle and cameras. That every people when destiny knocks on their = Most of her friends were strangers. Few I knew (© Mrs. Vogeler, is a good sign he will recover door with an iron insistence. = by reputation. from his 17 months of imprisonment. : : . gr Faye Emerson and her husband Skitch Hen- As 1 said, the penthouse party was my first. In the history of America, destiny has 2 derson arrived. Col. Tony Story, Gen. Mac- n Seemed strange to be in the same room with knocked thus three times: Qnce when we faced = Arthur's pilot, was there when I arrived. The fr h.C,YOU read or read about. And then you th ingly i ib f Briti = guests heard that Columnist Robert C. Ruark ‘IDK that they all had to start some place. Our e seemingly impossible odds of British power - and his wife were bringing Mrs i Vo i hostess, Betty Betz, started in Hammond, Ind. to gain our independence. Once at Ft. Sumter, when - wife of the g . 8 * I don't think Betty ever had plans for a New we faced the bloody task of preserving our union. And - recently released American telephone York penthouse and friend ho w 1 it is knocki tod a executive from a Hungarian prison. d S02 Who were celebrities ® knooxng 1oday. z Tn an Sperts i their, fields. py It is true that on other grave occasions Ameris A HAWAIIAN singer by the name of Mikilani ; oa awl befor wagers and cans have heard the knock of destiny. = Fo sang for the Bonn She blended well with Shiels, The hid fo Saw) before she walked. They heard it in 1917 when they sent their first £ the Oriental furnishings in the penthouse She had to paddle and get water in her nose expeditionary force to Europe. They heard it even = I noticed the practice was to touch the hostess +o times before she became a swimming more loudly in 1941, when they were roused out of an $ - on the cheeks with your cLeex val A champion. She had butterflies in her stomach isolationist lethargy to fight—again against odds- i = boy from the Moy Wo DO yal a6 o her first big assignment and acted silly one of the most brilliant and important wars in lis- ; : ; = as the penthouse gang did when he showed w. Tren a Sook, wan published, hear ‘that | TT DEMONSTRATION—The May Day radicals believe they are the "true revolutionaries." Do they under. = His high school friend is most attractive. there is always room on top. But rememeer there Pl Fg les Of Jinse Sucasions dil Be Jinks stand that America is the land of the permarent revolution? = Duri th : ! s thinkin or Coe tyoning 1 3 Some ch, Ture room on the bottom. Remember, World War I, and even in World War II, a mold IF WE ARE to act wisely, and in our own real can revolution but a human revolution. - = women who would be leaving school intent on tat eT Jas many crosspieces. You must | existed into which we could pour our vast energies. interests, we must know the meaning of America at The universal relevance of the American ProposiSs | g | In negotiate each one competently, sometimes slowly Our power—and in the d w leadershi 1 level tion has been asserted again and again by American - following a writing career. The majority have before you reach the t It isn’ p 2 Secon al Our 'aadership the fundamental level. ¢ = hopes of hitting the top. I don't care whether work, kids, Pl € lop. It isn't easy evenif you also—was essential to victory. But it was not our We have accordingly undertaken an examination leaders; and so has its corollary, that America itself: = ? g Pp ork, kids. Plan on doing some of it. task to make the mold. It was not our task to de- of the meaning of America, under the title “U. 8. A.:. -_that “grand scheme and design ju Providence,” as ) 5 termine either the geographical contours or the moral The Permanent Revolution.” John Adams ealis) thas a Mission to present the — i tent of the battle. That had already been done by Possibly, in placing so much emphasis upon funda- roposition to the rest o e world. . s It Happened Last Night the olution z ; H | the rest of the world. mentals that are well known to all Americans, we Lincoln called our revolution “the germ which . -— ql » = pp imburger Hunt But today, though we again have allies, though have erred in the direction of the obvious. This error, has vegetated, and still is to grow and expand into £ By Earl Wilson Bri - : -S yr rings Trouble we have the United Nations, though we have access however, if it is one, has been committed deliberately. the duty exsal lberiy of WAiind, Arica vs 1. Tis 2 | to resources all over the world, it is we who must It is a time for fundamentals: the crisis is such Sa merson, “The ce o merica is to ve = NEW YORK, May 26-1 have two secret vices. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . MYSTERY A shape the struggle: we must make the mold. that there must be no doubt in anyone's heart con- erate.” z = One is hot buttered popcorn, a throwback to MODEL JUNE HARVEY—who disappeared after | That is the meaning of the iron clang. Our out- cerning them. “= Th ; = my days on the farm in Ohio; the other, ham- saying she'd seen Prince Aly Khan in N.Y. told | 100k is the same as it was at the time of the Revolu- We hope that our review of these fundamentals SINCE AMERICA was born and brought up witly = burgers, on a bun. friends from a secret phone booth that she just | tion, and again at the time of the Civil War. The may help in some measure to repair the costly failure this sense of it own universal import, this generation = : saw him again at E 1 shape of things to come depends on us: our moral of the present generation of Americans to explain to of Americans has a duty either to renounce it or re = its e to indulge in gain at an E. 54th St. party! Get out = rein y. Beant! ie ram 3 when ge 1 the bloodhounds, sheriff! party decision, our wisdom, our vision, and our will. the rest of the world what America is all about. affirm it in a way that is clear both to ourselves and’ ; = break loose. In the sale of ABC to United Paramount i ru 2 > 9 0 to mankind. = = It was about 1:30 a8. m Theaters (tipped off here a week ago) George IT IS NOT merely a question of whether or not IT IS THE THESIS of this series that the U. 8. A. We wish to reaffirm the Proposition—not as an = z ’ ol : xd to McGin- Schubert, of Paramount, will run ABC Tv . = this country is going to have to fight another major represents a revolution in human affairs, which had academic exercise in Eighteenth-Century philosophy, x : Karl old boye, 2 Sntai down Xo. Qin. Barbara Hutton still wei ghed under 100 when she war. oy been in preparation for many hundreds of years, but but as it applies to the men and nations of our : s nis on Broadway an ve a g juicy left LeRoy . . . Dagmar and her mgr. Dann It is a question, rather, of policy: policy that will which was actually undertaken in the Eighteenth This series of articles is an attempt to define the’ % burger like we used to ... ” I thought. Hollywood are reaching an amicable split y show us a way to maintain the peace, if such a way Century and has been carried on ever since. American Proposition as we understand it and as we = I bought a paper. I would read p at one of $b * exists; policy that will give meaning to a war if we It is the revolution of the human individual Wis to advocate it. a rel z = the tables while enjoying the hamburger an GOOD RUMO r\ = have to fight. : against all forms of enslavement; against all forms e examine its essence, the sacredness of the free a beer. star ox Yow ein Wren a Toys The most pressing need of the American people of earthly power, whether spiritual, political, or individual and the Rights to be derived therefrom. = I bellied up to the counter and asked for two, Hollywood” but Gloria De Haven, ‘we 1 i 004, today, which the leadership of neither party has economic, that seek to govern man without con- Then we descend somewhat to the realm of political. -— = well done. Then, because all the price signs con- purty, personable, and musical hg * : » WS | heen able to fill, is a policy worthy of the leader- sulting his individual will. theory, to show the living principles through which’ = fused me, I said “How much are they?” of better material, when she or d a2 Y In need | ghip that has been thrust upon the people. Inherent in this revolution is a proposition, which the Proposition has manifested itself in the Amerie i = “How much are WHAT?” asked the Waiter. cafe the Versailles. On ir opened at that great | Such a policy, however, requires in the first place we call the American Proposition for the reason that can system of government. = ‘hy did he have to growl “WHAT?” like caught a cold (Sick tn © way In by plane she | 3 profound understanding of America. This is pre- it is to be found most clearly stated in the writings In both cases we have sought to distinguish bee =z Now why did he ave ° g r transaction? o g he cx Transit Gloria?) which she's | requisite to the intelligent formulation of more spe- and speeches of the founders of this country. But tween what is merely American, and hence transitory, z that, when it was a hamburge : m ell be fine . .. Eddie Moran (of Moran | cific programs with regard to this or that inter- in the eyes of those founders it was not merely. a and what is universal and timeless. s “Forty,” he said. 5 ack) will write the increasingly popular Phil | national situation, this or that area, this or that mili- proposition for Americans: it was universal; a propo- (Copyright, 1881, Time, Inc am siributed by United Feature = So I put down my 40c. Aan Tau show. Cracked Phil: “From Moran tary decision. sition for mankind, signalizing not merely an Ameri- TOMORROW: The American Proposition. | = “Forty apiece. That'll be 80c.” 2 ; . eS 3 a . = - Unnerved but still determined, -F—took my FARL'S PE z . d m C Ss ARLS . . . Abe Burrows pur- ) z an, 2 glass of beer, an Y ports that Father's Day is unique—it's the Joie f = P “You don’t sit here! another waiter said. that the presents Father buys are given to : = “Why not?” my teeth were already in the Father. : = first sandwich. : ; HB Doe Png d ke : = “You're a bar customer. You have to stay B'WAY BULLETINS: Is the No. 1 radio show gp — SI a £ at the bar.” losing a sponsor in the big radio depression”? . . . Su ~~ —=—2—2—o = Now this was exploding my nostalgic dream. Ted Williams gets 10 Gs for indorsing fishing | a — = ——— J = I wanted to sit, and read, and sip, and eat like eqpt.... Comic Jackie Gleason, a _— ™ BE I used to. It was such a beautiful, leisurely idea. in Drs. Hospital, postcarded oid = aw friends, “Hope you get well” .. = “LOOK,” 1 SAID, “I'll be glad to pay extra— How Sei Bradieys $=pected CHAPTER FOURTEEN = my mouth was still full of hamburger. 8 i nstead of re- : E " “No, you can't sit here,” the waiter said. signing. . . . Joan Allison of F THE WEATHER became a little more unsettled, E “I WILL sit here!” I announced. 3Cassblanca’ fame is scripting | with scattered rain squalls, after we had entered the E The headwalter came, the manager came. Sy Hetthrt's OID fadio series | area nearer the South Sea islands and the trade wind = I tackled the second hamburger, not thinking ... Art Waner’s Latin Quarter . I > Ee about its juciness, but whether some bouncer bandsmen gave 15 transfusions had changed its direction. = would propel me into Broadway. He ned re 1 Joos Chavie Bugis near It had blown steadily and surely from the southeast = The manager was very nice. e had no idea n “ies : ? ; = Iwasa RE He was a good guy and he June Valli singing only 3 | until we were a good way over in the equatorial current: = months, is a big hit at La Vie then it had veered round I talled. me sir. ; Hers ho En Rose where she’s on when e S v age speed was from 12 to 18 = “You see, sir, we've got waiters here who Celeste Holm isn't. Miss Valli more and more toward due chips” in the jargon current - i depend on these tables for tips,” he said. 5 : 2 p i Ee | “I'll be glad to pay,” I said. “I used to come ay east. We reached our most on board, we were now Jor 2 = nd bring my sandwiches over to the ISH I'D | AT: © 2S northerly position on June 5, S tn hore o Z my h WISH I'D SAID THAT: “It takes a lot of nerl iti J 10 time down to “six chips,” and = : tables.” learning to kiss like a beginner”’—Ray Barber. with latitude 6 degrees 19 min- the phosphorescence swirled in = { “Yes, that's in the afternoon, not at night,” “hn utes south. a regular wake astern of the = i he said TODAY'S BEST LAUGH: Many a member of We were then so close up to raft. -— | S . 3 8 S 8 = “I guess it was,” I admitted, apologetically. I Alcholics Anonymous, says Jack Gilford, takes the equator that it looked as if a 2 3 » : = left the waiter half a buck and departed with my leave of sbatmence . a we should sail above even. the FOUR MEN lay snoring in = nostalgia having cost me $1.45—and a temper. i x i : i ost northerly islands of the the bamboo cabin while Tor- = When I got home, I confessed to the B. W. the “I KNOW HOW TO BOSS MY WIFE y " stein» licki = YRr : : ”" Marquesas group and disappear e at clicking with the 2 whole story and she took their side. AROUND, I beat her up every morning, claimed completely in the sea without Morse key and I was on steer. s “Goodness!” she said. “It's not safe for me to Billy De Wolfe. “I get up at 6, she gets up at 8 finding land. But then the | h 8 ee : = let you out alone at night!” + « . That's earl, brother. rade. wind swung around far ing watch. Just before mid- = ther, from east to northeast, night I caught sight of a quite 5 and drove us in a curve down unusual sea which came break- = . : toward the latitude of the ing astern of us right across’ E Americana Hits at Teachers’ wora of islands. 4 the whole of my disturbed field ey 3 : that win > CP, un hE g By Robert C. Ruark Pay Hike Tactics 2 lien happened Tat ind of vision, Behind tt T vould see : : : : z = for days on end, and then we here and there the foanfing |. Knut Haugland goes down to inspect the lashings on the raft's bottom. Thor Heyerdah| holds 3 NEW YORK, May 26—The little red school- She was the coach of the baseball team, and |. = forgot whose steering crests of two more huge seas him firmly by the legs. a house has sagged another notch in the formation one time, when the left end got kicked silly in a watch it was except at night ? J : § : = = of American character. We just had a vote by football game, she filled in capably. She also was when the watch was alone on like the first. following hard on Tiki were above water again crests were hissing 20 and 25 her way with ease and buoy« = the High School Teachers Association here that good at kissing games. deck. Tor. if" sea: and wind iy heels. : find Slicing quietly Gown a gen- feet above the trough of the ancy, the storm became an exy oy F- sounds dreadfully like the union's portal-to-portal. Ae were steady. the steering oar we ourselves had not just bie ave ack on the other side. sea, so that we had them on citing form of sport, and we = : for he objected to our nude , passed the place, I should have en the seas were normal a level with our masthead when all delighted in the fury round - A vote on stoppage of extracurricular activi AS A MORAL force she obj as lashed fast and the Kor.- = , forbad was lashed fa ‘ been convinced that what I again, we ourselves were down in the about us which the balsa raft - ties says the teachers refuse to perform any task bathing in a nearby créek because it forbade Tiki sail remained filled WithZ in or out of the classroom coeducational refreshment at recess. She sug- t Cr attending io it. ‘Then saw was a high surf flung up rn» trough. All hands had to mastered so adroitly, always E beyond the minimum require- =, gested we wear bathing suits so the girls could | Out ou ch g 1d sit quiet- CVT A dangerous shoal. I gave WHERE the three big seas Cc amble about on deck bent seeing that she herself lay org = y ts of “safety and decency.” play, too, and christened the swimming hole by | the night watch could sit qu a warning shout, as the first came from. we Rave never ber double, while the wind shook the wave tops like a cork, while = ments of "safety Ee : ' herself, to lead the way for. the ly in the cabin door and 100k gaa came like a long wall sweep- er ) : " the bamboo wall and whistled all the main weight of the rags = We quote some more: “ . . . playing hooky herself, to lea . way at the stars. If the constella- ft in th ligh able to explain with certainty, and howled in all the rigging. ing water was al v 2 the association’s board of dele- female pupils. We did not delve too deeply that tions changed their positions ng after us in the moonlight, unless they were due to dis- gging. i L al as always a few a - gates also banned participa- day into the’ problems of American history. It | th v. ot was time for Him and wrenched the raft into po- turbances on the sea bottom. To protect the radio corner inches beneath, ; = tion on any committee related was being made for us in the crick. Some call | In the sky, Ss theE sition to take what was coming. which are not so uncommon in We Stretched canvas over the The sea had much in common = to departmental or school work it creek. id 30,00 Any see wi oY) Tob When the first sea reached these regions rear wall and port side of the with the mountains in such = gre: as » ; S, the raft flung her stern up . © cabin. All loose cargo was weather. It was like bei - . . « They resolved to adopt a Miss Knight spent a great deal more time > us : g e ng out - : ; ind that had shifted. sideways and rose us over the Two days later we had our lashed 1 d th it initn z policy of passive resistance, outside the class than in it in her attempt to $ ys se us first storm. It started b ashed securely, an e sa n the wilds in a storm, up om - *in y . i y rav 3 , \ 3 2 . y the h d de fast : X = and non-co-operation, should civilize "us, but currycomb us she did. and when . 8 » wave back which had just _ was hauled down and made fas the highest mountain plateaus, = school officials resort to coer- she busted herself up in an airplane later on IT WAS incredible how easy broken, so that it hissed and frau ing Syms aay com around the bamboo yard. naked and gray. Even though g cion, legality or official direc- she got more sincere attention from her pimply | 4 was to steer by the stars boiled all glong He crest. ot Sng a oh re When the sky clouded over, We Were right in the Heart of = tives.” graduates than was ever commanded by Mr. when we had seen them march- rode through the welter of boil- ; : : : the sea grew dark and threaten- the tropics, when the raft glided S Since April of 1950 teachers have refused to Robert Hutchins. ing across the vault of the sky Ing foam which poured along riing. over our leags up "ing, and in every direction it up and down over the smoking ) Play in outside activities, such as athletics and She created fairly responsible beings out of | go. weeks on end. Indeed, there both sides of the raft. while iv} ie oY erg SUCCEN was white-crested with break- waste of sea we always thought b stuff, but this is the first time the official stopper gyupjous raw material, and delivered us ripe for 4 ‘ ihe heavy sea itself volled by ¥ \Bvaces Dy a thick cloud 0 co" ae f dead of racing downhill amo — F was not much else to look at bank which rolled er th g e g P g ng E has dropped on nose-wiping inside the class- .yityre into the domain of Miss Hetty Struthers, at night. under us, The bow flung itself De ° Cap vi F the foam lay like stripes’'to wind- snowdrifts and rock faces. = room. . the math shark. and Miss Emma Martin, the We knew where we could ex- Up last as the wave passed, irom southward. ward down the backs of the The steering watch had to - Naturally salaries are involved, and let's say English expert who would whirl in her tomb if pect to see the different con- and we slid, stern first, down Then there came gusts of long seas; and everywhere, keep its eyes open in such R right here that most teachers in most places are .° ..11504 T was making a living out of commas | i.1ations night after night Into a broad trough of the Wind from the most unexpected where the wave ridges had weather. When the steepest = Woelully undetpaid, But also ta 1 hate the way 4 paragraphs. ? and, when we came up toward Waves. difeetions, hat Vi was fm broken and plunged down, green seas passed under the forward s oY Ue fOTCINE A Tow x > $ ¢v + the equator, the Great Bear fT ” or the steering watc patches like wounds lay froth-. half of the raft, the logs aft = o> SP I KNEW SOME great ones in high school. | rice 4 clear of the horizon in IMMEDIATELY after the to keep control. As quickly as ing for a long time in the blue- rose right out of the water, but = FLASHING BACK to the dear, dead youth, I Miss Clifford, who ran the home room like a the north that we were anxious NeXt wall of water came on and We got our stern turned to the black sea. The crests blew away the next second they plunged - recall I might be a criminal today except for the party. Red something-or-other and Bernice Dom- lest we should catch a glimpse T©%¢ up, while we were again new direction of the wind, so gag they broke, and the spray down again to climb up over. 8 good offices of a Miss Carrie Mae Knight, mar- pick, who used to chaperone us on beach picnics. | ¢ the Pole Star, which appears lifted hurriedly into the air and that the sail bellied out stiff stood like salt rain over the the mext crest. Each time the = ried name unknown. Miss Knight, who then could A fine fat lady who made chemistry fun. A little when one comes from south- the clear water masses broke and safe, just as quickly the gea. seas came so close upon one Ss = have been at least 20 years old, presided over a lady principal with whom even a freshman covnld ward and crosses the equator. °Ver US aft as we shot over the gusts came at us from another When the tropical rain poured another that the hindmost = 7th grade class that contained the widest collec- argue. A Miss Counts who taught business arith- | But as the northeasterly trade edge. As a result the raft was quarter, squeezed the proud over us in horizontal squalls reached us while the first was s tion of junior hoodlums at large. Including your metic, I think. | wind set in, the Great Bear flung right broadside on to the bulge out of the sail, and made and whipped the surface of the stil] holding the bow in the air; - agent here, who once was placed in solitary for We never had a real chance to get to be | sank again ’ seas, and it was impossible to it swing around and thrash sea, invisible all round us, the ' Then the solid sheets of water g talking too much, an ill that still afflicts him. practicing hoodlums, and the teachers deprived | on July 2, our night watch eneh her round quickly Shout Lig peril of both crew Water Sat rah pom Sh Sale thundered in over the stee = If I ever loved a woman deeply; even at the us of the chance through their voluntary out- | could me lemger sit in peace : 0, . an eards taste rackish, watch in a terrifying welter, g | The next sea came and rose But then the wind suddenly while we crawled about the deck 8 = age of 12, it was Miss Carrie Mae Knight. She side activities. | studying the night sky. We out of the stripes of foam like a set in to blow SUAIEH from Pak rs riot tie Casi but next second the stern — retty-ugly, with red hair and green 1 will always believe that the ext | aked an ozen, g up and the flood = Was Sort of preiiy-ugly Eroel vil} alway on a © extracurricular | had a strong wind and nasty glittering wall which began to the quarter whence the bad 11 th was in order to - eyes. When she crossed her knees, pink bloomers efforts pay off more than what actually goes on | geq after several days of light gal al n 3 t q a a e gear § as through the prongs of a forks = \ h of t , | 2 A ong Its upper edge just as weather came and, as the black weather the storm. - = occasionally peeped; lending a touch of sex to & with the three R's inside the little red school- | northeasterly breeze. Late in reached us. When it plunged clouds rolled th { ; ' = class that included a lout named Shepherd Who house. the night we had brilliant down I saw ‘nothing else to-do: " ou . ao : Dye! ua : e breste sn 2 TOMORROW — . gE | was about a year older than Carrie. Which is why I am sentimentally sad to see moonlight and a quite fresh pt hang on as tight as I could 3 rane a3 oy ng which WHEN THE STORM rushed dolphins and tu 0 z | I suppose Miss Knight made some 80 bucks that the teachers are playing strict-union hard sailing wind. to a projecting bamboo pole of atomic Fo up over the horizon and battle royal in water rt - a month for the eight months she taught. But ball in their fight for more dough, We should : We measured our speed by the cabin roof; there I held my xm, gathered about us for the frst _ the raft after the storm 4 = she knew each kid and each kid's parent intl- always have paid them enough to make them counting the seconds we took breath while I felt that we were A... » time, strained anticipation and “finally p ovided the | day's = mately. She read to us for an hour a day, for conscious of the fact that what you give a child | to pass a chip, flung out ahead flung sky-high and everythi ©. IN THE COURSE of an iIn- anxiety were discernible in our.’ Ashing of % y 3 p g sky-higl ng g ¢ ; Lg = fun magnificent stories that took us all away of yourself is worth more than what they pay | on one side of us, and found ° round me carried away in roar-: credibly short time the seas ' looks. But when it was upon’ © ; ‘ ud from the dreary demands of long division and you to pound formal book larnin’ into his un- | that we were establishing a ing whirlpools of foam. ‘round us were flung up to & wus in earnest, .and the KonHn I-before-E-except-after-C. willing brain,

: speed record. While our aver- In a second we and the Kon- height of 15 feet, while single Tiki took everything that came

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