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          <lb />6-pc.<lb /><lb />place<lb />setting $43.75<lb />Fed. Tax incl.<lb /><lb />Yours alone...<lb />your initials<lb />styled in your<lb />own hand-en-<lb />graved mono-<lb /><lb />gram create the<lb />pattern design.<lb /><lb />| KINGSLEY<lb /><lb />6-pe. place<lb />setting $39.75<lb />Fed. Tax incl.<lb /><lb />..anew concept<lb />in table setting<lb />harmony. Kings-<lb /><lb />ley by Kirk com-<lb />bines the perfect<lb />form in sterling<lb />with a floral de-<lb />sign that beauti-<lb />fully matches<lb />AmericaTs most<lb />popular china<lb />patterns.<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Old<lb /><lb />Maryland ~<lb />Engraved Cynthia RepousseT :<lb />$49.95 $37.50 $35.00 {<lb />ee ito<lb /><lb />America's oldest<lb />: silversmiths<lb />e create Kirk ster-<lb />- ling for thosewho<lb />appreciate the<lb />best. Necessarily<lb />limited in quan-<lb />tity, you'll find it<lb />only at the finest<lb />dealers in your<lb />community.<lb /><lb />ee<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />Write for your<lb />oSilver notes from<lb />KirkT and name of<lb />Kirk dealer near: 4<lb />est you. Dept. B,<lb /><lb />Baitimore 18, Md<lb />Se we at a<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />6-pc.<lb />place settings<lb />fed. Tax inci.<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>The REBEL<lb /><lb />Published by the Student Government Association of East Carolina College. Created by the Pub-<lb />lications Board of East Carolina College as a literary magazine to be edited by students and de-<lb />signed for the publication of student material.<lb /><lb />VOLUME 4 FALL, 1960 NUMBER 1<lb />TABLE OF CONTENTS<lb />Page<lb />EDITORIAL 7<lb />Editor REBEL YELL 8<lb />Roy MARTIN<lb />2 ~aaa FEATURE<lb />USINESS ° :<lb />ai ciis ia ing Interview With Harry Golden"Part I 3<lb />Managing Editor FICTION<lb />Jessie ELLINGTON Moore Gagged To Death by John Quinn... 11<lb />~acre mdttor Larryman by Lyman Harris 15<lb />NELSON DUDLEY POETRY<lb />Book Review Editor The Love Letter by Sarah Hansen 5<lb />ee Night, The Red Light, Waves by Denyse Dr=per_..__" 9<lb />Exchange Editor 1. Mia Souwes by Tonk Ieee a 14<lb />CAROLISTA FLETCHER<lb />Asst. Exchange Editor ART<lb />dink wee heals oTobacco Market� (Linoleum Cut) by Al Dunkle.. 2<lb />% : oThe Resting One� (Lithograph) by Nelson Dudley_.____ 6<lb />as Seti hateain yuan oUntitled� (Woodcut) by Ed Musgrave. 10<lb />DENYSE DRAPER i<lb />oThe Women� (Lithograph) by Jim Roper_..____»_»»_»_»&gt;»&gt;&gt;_ 18<lb />Assistant to the Editor ooPime Of� CWoodeut) by Al: Dunkle: 4 20<lb />cage Welt.te oThe Waiting OneT (Woodcut) by Karen McLawhorn_.. 23<lb />Advertising Manager oDesolation� (Woodcut) by Linda Keffler_...___--_-_-_-_-_-_<lb />B. Totson WIx1Is, Jr. oUntitled� (Lithograph) by Jim Roper 26<lb />hesin dies oSouthern Gothic� (Lithograph) by Nelson Dudley... 28<lb />Otw Wiis Paces oHeading Home� (Linoleum Cut) by Al Dunkle________. 30<lb />oThe Pick-up� (Woodcut) by Al Dunkle Si<lb />Circulation and Advertisement<lb />ALPHIA PHI OMEGA FRATERNITY REBEL REVIEW 19-27<lb />Wational Ademtict Reviews by Sherry Maske, Dr. Edgar Hirshberg, Jack Willis,<lb />Representatives Denyse Draper, Dr. Roy Prince, Dr. Frances R.<lb />CoLLece Macazines, INc. Winkler and Staff.<lb />405 Lexington Ave.<lb />New York 17, N. Y. COVER by Robert Harper and Nelson Dudley<lb /><lb />NOTICE"Contributions to THE REBEL should be directed to P.O. Box 1420, E. C.C. Editorial and business offices are located<lb />at 309% Austin Building. Manuscripts and artwork submitted by mail should be accompanied by a self-addressed envelope<lb />and return postage. The publishers assume no responsibility for the return of manuscripts or artwork.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />by AL DUNKLE<lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb />~<lb />»<lb />&gt;<lb />oO<lb />=<lb />=]<lb />at<lb />°<lb />&amp;<lb />4<lb />~~<lb /><lb />.<lb />iw OES<lb /><lb />x<lb />4<lb />CaN<lb />a f<lb /><lb />oTobacco MarketT<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Interview With<lb /><lb />HARRY GOLDEN<lb /><lb />Note: The following interview will be printed<lb />in two installments, the second to be printed in<lb />the Winter Issue, and the opinions expressed<lb />herein do not necessarily reflect the views of<lb />the staff or of the administration of the College.<lb /><lb />Interviewer: Do you consider humor your most<lb />effective instrument in satire?<lb /><lb />Mr. Golden: Well, I would say that humor and<lb />satire are the most effective instruments in all<lb />writing. Whether I have been able to achieve it to<lb />any great degree, I am not certain yet"I have<lb />certainly tried for it. Perhaps, in some areas of<lb />thought, I have seen some effectiveness. For ex-<lb />ample, I do not know of any other speaker in the<lb />South, speaking against the continued segregation<lb />of the Negro, who has been invited to speak before<lb />so many Southern forums. ITve spoken in Ala-<lb />bama, Mississippi, Texas, and certainly all over<lb />North Carolina and Virginia, and have been greet-<lb />ed with great warmth. I think this is due to the<lb />fact that my speech or forms of expression are in<lb />terms of a bit of humor ... and this helps a great<lb />deal. This does not mean that I compromise my<lb />views in any way, but the presentation of them<lb />in the form of some humor has helped greatly"<lb />not only in the acceptance of them, but also, per-<lb />haps, in their effectiveness. Take, for example,<lb />the Negro Vertical Plan, which I promoted before<lb />the North Carolina Legislature some years ago.<lb />It was a bit of humor... at least an attempt at it.<lb />When KressesT Department Store was having trou-<lb />ble in High Point, the manager received a wire<lb />from the New York office, which said oPut in the<lb />Golden Vertical Plan!T And so, they took the<lb />seats out of the snack bar, and everybody stood<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />up, and ate and drank like mad, and nobody got<lb />angry about anything"and that is the way it<lb />worked.<lb /><lb />They never would invite anyone to make<lb />speeches such as I have, who is going to deliver<lb />a speech against racial segregation as such. How-<lb />ever, they will invite a guy who might make them<lb />laugh a little bit. I still give them a straight-down-<lb />the-line speech just the same. This is a big help.<lb /><lb />Interviewer: Do you consider provincialism pri-<lb />marily a characteristic of southern life?<lb /><lb />Mr. Golden: Well, I would say that the atmos-<lb />phere of provincialism is slowly, but surely dis-<lb />appearing from southern life"if we understand<lb />provincialism. Essentially, provincialism is the<lb />attitude in which people are concerned purely with<lb />their own affairs. It comes from the idea of some-<lb />one from the provinces, which to the urban dwell-<lb />ers meant people who live in rural sections of the<lb />country, and who are interested primarily in their<lb />own local affairs. I think this is disappearing in<lb />the South. The South is undergoing a tremendous<lb />urbanization and industrialization, which is strik-<lb />ing down the idea of provincialism.<lb /><lb />Fortunately for me, of course, I have seen this<lb />change in North Carolina, which added tremen-<lb />dously to my opportunity as an observer, reporter<lb />and writer. These last twenty-one years have pro-<lb />duced in North Carolina, and elsewhere in the<lb />South, what I think is the greatest domestic story<lb />of the twentieth century. I am speaking of the<lb />change of the last agrarian civilization into an<lb />urban-industrial civilization. Much of this has<lb />happened during the twenty years I have been in<lb />North Carolina. As a matter of actual statistics,<lb /><lb />4 3<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />(since I am writing about this very thing, I am<lb />familiar with these figures) in 1940, North Caro-<lb />lina was 65% farm and 35% industrial. In 1960,<lb />it is exactly the reverse. This is a fantastic change<lb />in the culture of a great sovereign state, and you<lb />can multiply this by the other states of the entire<lb />old South.<lb /><lb />While the industrialization and urbanization<lb />have not been as striking as in North Carolina,<lb />they had been going at a pretty rapid pace. Even<lb />your rural areas today have become semi-urban-<lb />ized, semi-industrialized, since the establishment<lb />of the rural road program by Governor Scott,<lb />about seven or eight years ago. The resulting ef-<lb />fects of this program have enabled the people to<lb />come into town from even the most rural areas.<lb />The last figures I had on this from the State De-<lb />partment of Labor show that over 50% of the<lb />rural farms in North Carolina, which are still<lb />rural and still farming, have at least one member<lb />of the family taking that road every morning to<lb />work in a factory in a nearby city. In some fami-<lb />lies, the children go into the factories every morn-<lb />ing, so that the familyTs income today is derived<lb />from the industrial-urban society as well as the<lb />farm. So the industrialization may be greater<lb />than the figures show.<lb /><lb />Interviewer: Do you think that the Negro-<lb />White question, framed as a conflict, will be a<lb />chief source of material for much durable writing?<lb /><lb />Mr. Golden: Of course it will be a source. Out<lb />of all controversy, struggle, and pain have come<lb />our most valuable writings. We already have evi-<lb />dences of this in the great body of writings, which<lb />have come out of the South concerning the racial<lb />question. We will have much, much more. We<lb />will have some great novels coming of this inte-<lb />gration struggle of the Negro. The Negroes them-<lb />selves " the Southern Negroes " will begin to<lb />write. Many of them are at it now. In addition,<lb />this whole racial problem in the South, since the<lb />Supreme Court struck down racial segregation,<lb />will also become a part of the literature of what<lb />we have discussed here . . . the end of the last<lb />great agricultural civilization on this continent<lb />and the urbanization of the South. This will pro-<lb />duce a major body of work, and I believe the<lb />South will continue to produce the best American<lb />writing during the next twenty-five years.<lb /><lb />Interviewer: Has religion in history been so<lb />great a source of intolerance as racial differences,<lb />or are the two indistinguishable?<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb />Mr. Golden: Religious intolerance has caused<lb />many wars and many sorrows. I think, however,<lb />it goes deeper than the term oreligious intoler-<lb />ance.� When you deal in matters of hatred and<lb />massacre and murder, you must probe for deeper<lb />meanings than the mere dislike of one man for<lb />another manTs religion.<lb /><lb />The Moslems started at the Arabian sands and<lb />swept across the world to the Gates of Hercules<lb />and up to Spain. They were finally stopped at<lb />Tours, but in the process of those few centuries,<lb />millions of ounbelievers� were killed.<lb /><lb />You have had the One Hundred Years War,<lb />essentially a struggle between Protestantism and<lb />Roman Catholicism, and the burning of John Huss,<lb />the massacre of St. Bartholemew, the terror<lb />against the Huguenots, the murders of oPapists�<lb />in Calvinist Scotland, the Catholic Inquisition<lb />against heretics. In our country, we burned<lb />Catholic convents in New England, killed Baptists<lb />in Virginia and chased the Mormons across the<lb />continent, killing some, burning the camps of<lb />most of them as they stopped to take a breather<lb />for a night"you run out of breath in the recital,<lb />donTt you"endless, isnTt it? And because I am a<lb />polite sort of fellow, I havenTt even mentioned<lb />what the Christian world has done to the Jews<lb />since the First Century with ghettoes, distinctive<lb />garments, dunce caps, confiscation, restriction, iso-<lb />lation, and massacre"massacre in nearly every<lb />century"small massacres, practice for the mur-<lb />der of six million in 1939 to 1945"in an era in<lb />which we already had brass plumbing, Mickey<lb />Rooney, and white wall tires.<lb /><lb />I said it goes deeper than your term oreligious<lb />intolerance.� Of course it does! First of all is the<lb />lack of conviction"that is basic. When a man<lb />feels CERTAIN of his faith"he does not kill<lb />someone else who does not believe in the same<lb />faith"he pities him"he feels sorry for him.<lb />oLook at that poor felow. He can grab himself a<lb />fistful of eternity and salvation and he doesnTt<lb />have the brains to do it.�<lb /><lb />... Of course, pity, sympathy. But when you get<lb />angry at him instead of pitying him, when you<lb />grab him by the lapels and shout, oWhy donTt<lb />you believe as I do, you son of a bitch"hbelieve,<lb />believe as I do, you bastard"come into my camp<lb />or ITll kill you.� . . . When a fellow says that, as<lb />fellows have said it for a few thousand years"<lb />then you can be sure he is not certain about his<lb />faith. He wants company. He wants to do some-<lb />thing to strengthen that belief of his"he wants to<lb />reassure himself. Why the hell is that guy out of<lb />my fold? he says. And this disturbs the hell out<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>of him. Actually religious hatred is the result of<lb />many causes, caste, fear of the stranger, myth,<lb />fear of economic competition, many causes, but<lb />basic to it"at its foundation, if hate and massacre<lb />can be said to have a foundation,"at the founda-<lb />tion of religious intolerance, as you put it, is"<lb />lack of faith on the part of the one who does the<lb />hating, does the intolerating. Lack of faith"un-<lb />certainty breeds fear.<lb /><lb />At many levels of our history, religious intoler-<lb />ance and racial hatred have been the same thing,<lb />although fear of the black man has been a uni-<lb />versal myth. And here I do not refer to the South-<lb />erners specifically. All cultures in the world"the<lb />white races"have had this deep-seeded fear and<lb />hatred of the black man. When mothers frighten-<lb />ed their children with scary stories, the stories<lb />involved the bogey man"who was always black"<lb />in my own Jewish culture the worst thing you<lb />can say"is a black year on you"black"you<lb />should see only black"is a curse of the Slavic<lb />peoples everywhere in Europe"Renan once said<lb />that the reason the Germans were such violent<lb />anti-Semites is that they do not have the black<lb />man"the Jew becomes the surrogate for the<lb />Negro. I have seen that happen right here in<lb />America"I have seen it happen in Alabama,<lb />where hatred of the Negro was transferred to the<lb />Jew, even when that Jew was an ardent white<lb />supremacist, and was supporting the White Citi-<lb />zens Council. Amazing. I always tell the Jews: It<lb />wonTt help you. Nothing will help you when you<lb />try to reflect the prejudices of the society in<lb />which you live"you might just as well be a hu-<lb />manitarian"youTll get the rap for it anyway.<lb /><lb />Here, too, racial hatred is a matter of fear...<lb />and since it involves the renunciation of logic, no<lb />logic can prevail against it. For example, every<lb />minority race everywhere has been oaccused� of<lb /><lb />special sexual prowess"the early anti-Semitic<lb />writers spoke of the voluptuous Jewess, and they<lb />wrote of it, smacking their lips, and gave you the<lb />impression of a rape and a massacre"and the<lb />Negro"we are obsessed with our fear of his sex"<lb />the history of our lynchings during the early part<lb />of this century is also a history of mutilated geni-<lb />tals"mutilated even when the alleged crime was<lb />robbery or even when the Negro was lynched be-<lb />cause of a violent argument with his oboss man.�<lb />Sex ... and every minority has been accused of<lb />it" this is part of the myth and no logic can pre-<lb />vail against it. For instance, you can"look here,<lb />during the Civil War the Southerner left three<lb />million blacks behind with their women, the white<lb />woman, and nothing happened"as a matter of<lb />fact we have wonderful, wonderful stories of<lb />Negro men protecting the white women against<lb />marauding Union soldiers. But such an argument<lb />gets you nowhere, when you have this fear and<lb />these myths by the tail . . . here, too, the reasons<lb />involve economics, fear of competition, a sense of<lb />guilt and caste"but mostly caste. When a man<lb />feels himself to be inadequate, he needs someone<lb />below him on the ototem pole�. If you take the<lb />Negro away from him, where will he find his<lb />caste? Ah, and here you have the reason that the<lb />upper middle class turned on the Negro, after the<lb />Supreme Court decision. Certainly, the upper<lb />middle class does not fear social or economic com-<lb />petition from the Negro, but the thought of the<lb />millions of southerners, who do need this CASTE,<lb />and if the Negro is gone, where will he get his<lb />caste? He will get it in the labor unions, and he<lb />will begin to vote and he will do a million things<lb />within his community which the big man would<lb />like him not to do. He will rock the boat and that<lb />is bad for many people, who do not want the<lb />boat rocked.<lb /><lb />the Love Letter<lb /><lb />It is a love letter<lb /><lb />Blurred and mysterious,<lb />Written in a delicate hand<lb />By the mighty sea<lb /><lb />To his brown mistress, earth.<lb /><lb />If I could understand<lb /><lb />This ageless message<lb /><lb />Between these ageless two<lb />The answer of life would come<lb />To this intruder.<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />Oh to understand<lb />This scribbling, scratching, scrawling<lb />In the sand<lb /><lb />It is not an etching<lb /><lb />Made of salt and sun,<lb />Nor is it the sand piperTs<lb />Forgotten footprints.<lb /><lb />"SARAH HANSEN<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />oThe Resting One� (Lithograph) by NELSON DUDLEY<lb /><lb />6 THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>A WORD SAID......<lb /><lb />In recent years, East Carolina has made a steady<lb />progression away from the nomenclature of<lb />oTeachersT College.� This has been a distinct<lb />move"and rightly so, for no institution of higher<lb />learning should arbitrarily be limited to one type<lb />of curriculum. During the course of this tran-<lb />sition period an upheaval in the cultural life here<lb />has been evident. The recognition achieved by<lb />individuals and departments prove this fact.<lb /><lb />This recognition represents the evolvement of<lb />a mature force on this campus which, if nurtured,<lb />can be the motivating element behind the eventual<lb />creation of an atmosphere at East Carolina, which<lb />thrives upon a thirst for knowledge. We can-<lb />not deny this force its right to exist. It is vital<lb />to the future effectiveness of education, not only<lb />at East Carolina, but also to any other institution<lb />which has the potential for development of an<lb />acute hunger for thought.<lb /><lb />In the future development of this atmosphere<lb />of learning, apathy exists as the most prominent<lb />opposing factor. The apathy which prevails is<lb />excusable with understanding. It is due to the<lb />times and the type of environment in which we<lb />live. In clarifying this, it can be said that today,<lb />young people are well aware of the fact that to<lb />oget aheadT, it is necessary to attend college. In<lb />relation to this, what is even more important is<lb />the existence of the fact that worthwhile employ-<lb />ment is based primarily on the attainment of a<lb />college degree. With this in mind, a great ma-<lb />jority of college students receiving degrees each<lb />year are earning just that"a degree. A vital<lb />part of their education has been overshadowed<lb />with the oget ahead� concept; thus apathy.<lb /><lb />Here at East Carolina, before an atmosphere for<lb />learning can be effectively created, it is necessary<lb />to coordinate the oget ahead� concept with the<lb />cultural elements of the campus. To this end, a<lb />graduate of this school will receive a full educa-<lb />tion"an education which will not only prepare<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />him to meet the obstacles which life poses, but<lb />also will prepare him to interact with his con-<lb />temporaries in a manner befitting a college<lb />graduate.<lb /><lb />How can this apathy be overcome? This is a<lb />tremendous problem"tremendous in the sense<lb />that an interest for creating an atmosphere for<lb />learning must be created first. No man can be<lb />forced to be interested in anything. He must<lb />first be stimulated, and then the interest will de-<lb />velop as a result of the stimuli. There have been<lb />proposals offered here in past years, which em-<lb />braced the desire to create a more improved in-<lb />tellectual climate. There have been such moves as<lb />the inauguration of competitive intramural intel-<lb />lectual activity. In addition, there have been many<lb />noted speakers brought to the campus, speaking<lb />on subjects vital to the better understanding of<lb />life for those who will one day be coping with the<lb />problems which life projects. All these moves<lb />met with little success, and were eventually aban-<lb />doned.<lb /><lb />As another example, this magazine, not only<lb />in its infancy, but also at the present, is faced<lb />with opposition questioning its worth in terms<lb />of the expenditure of the studentTs money. An<lb />education cannot be measured in terms of mone-<lb />tary value. This magazine and other moves, men-<lb />tioned previously, are symbols of seeds which<lb />have been planted in order eventually to create an<lb />atmosphere of learning, motivated by the in-<lb />quisitiveness of the human mind.<lb /><lb />It is with these thoughts in mind that the<lb />editors and others connected with this publication<lb />dedicate their efforts, throughout this year and<lb />in future years, to the development of an atmos-<lb />phere which is dependent upon thought"thought<lb />stimulated by an honest desire to consider, ex-<lb />plore, and learn. And if we succeed in causing<lb />only one individual to think . . . we have accomp-<lb />lished our purpose.<lb /><lb />"Roy M.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />THE REBEL YELL<lb /><lb />As in past years, The Rebel has made changes<lb />with the coming of each new year. Many of these<lb />changes were made in order to bring to the stu-<lb />dents a product of student endeavor which would<lb />enhance the reputation of East Carolina as an<lb />educational institution of great merit.<lb /><lb />Perhaps the most notable change in the maga-<lb />zine is in the cover. In this issue, a photograph<lb />will be used for material. In relation to this, any<lb />student wishing to submit a photograph for pos-<lb />sible cover use is invited to do so. The cover<lb />photograph for this issue was done by Robert<lb />Harper, former Art Editor of The Rebel, and<lb />alumnus of East Carolina.<lb /><lb />Another noticeable alteration in this issueTs<lb />makeup is the inclusion of national advertising.<lb />This, the editors believe, will add a distinctive note<lb />to the appearance of the magazine.<lb /><lb />As far as material is concerned, in this issue<lb />the present editors have followed the policy set<lb />by previous staffs, in presenting interviews with<lb />some of North CarolinaTs most distinguished writ-<lb />ers. Although Harry Golden is not a native of<lb />North Carolina, the editors feel fortunate in hav-<lb />ing been able to obtain his remarks. The second<lb />installment of the interview will follow in the<lb />winter quarter.<lb /><lb />The poetry section is composed of verse, writ-<lb /><lb />ten by Denyse Draper, Tom Jackson, and Sara<lb />Hansen. Denyse Draper was a second place win-<lb />ner in last yearTs writing contest. Jackson pre-<lb />sents for publication his poem, oT.M.Ts Solitude�,<lb />while Sarah Hansen, a transfer from Montreat,<lb />offers her prize winning poem, oThe Love LetterT.<lb />Miss Hansen was third award winner of the Olive<lb />Tilford Dargan Prize in the Eleventh Annual<lb />Poetry Day Contest, held October 15, in Asheville,<lb />sponsored by the Asheville branch of the National<lb />League of American Penwomen.<lb /><lb />The short stories in this issue came from the<lb />creative writing class. The authors, John Quinn<lb />and Lyman Harris, have presented two outstand-<lb />ing works, and the editors predict a promising<lb />future for these two writers.<lb /><lb />In the art section, past contributors Al Dunkle,<lb />Jim Roper and Art Editor Nelson Dudley are<lb />represented by a number of drawings. Linda Kef-<lb />fer and Ed Musgrave are newcomers to the maga-<lb />zine this quarter, and future work from these<lb />artists will be forthcoming.<lb /><lb />Reviews for this issue are by Pat Farmer,<lb />Book Review Editor; Dr. Frances R. Winkler of<lb />the English Department, Denyse Draper, Jack<lb />Willis, a transfer from San Francisco State Col-<lb />lege; Sherry Maske, Dr. Edgar Hirshberg, and<lb />Dr. J. Roy Prince.<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>Poetry<lb /><lb />Night<lb /><lb />I sat watching night<lb />arrive to the garden,<lb />Breath and being enclosed<lb />tightly<lb />inside myself so I<lb />would not disturb it.<lb /><lb />Ringed worshipful insects<lb />Crouched<lb />Stooped in miniature prologue<lb />spewing<lb />Myriad incantations to coming<lb />shadow and image"<lb />Night,<lb />clutching swiftly<lb />Proteus-like<lb />Obscuring<lb />Enveloping<lb />with black profiles<lb />j The temporal colors of day.<lb /><lb />Ripe verdancy discarded,<lb />The stippled garden thrust upward<lb />moon-silver blossoms<lb />Cradling their incense<lb />with half-curled petals...<lb />Welcoming the night.<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />by DENYSE DRAPER<lb /><lb />Che Red Light<lb /><lb />The red light stares sullenly<lb />Hurry<lb />You<lb /><lb />Hurry across wet concrete streets<lb /><lb />To safety.<lb /><lb />(Step on reflections of yourself<lb /><lb />in the rush"<lb /><lb />It doesnTt matter.)<lb /><lb />Up there a red light promises<lb />safety<lb /><lb />So clutch the promise tightly<lb /><lb />And run.<lb /><lb />Waves<lb /><lb />The first wave caressed my feet softly<lb />with delicate white fingers of foam<lb /><lb />Then reluctantly withdrew, leaving<lb /><lb />Myriad treasures sparkling on the sand<lb />for me to fondle and store away.<lb /><lb />The others that followed<lb />Pulled at my toes<lb />with impudent familiarity<lb />Tickled the sand beneath them<lb />into quivering laughter<lb />Heartily smacked my knees<lb />with pudgy white fists.<lb /><lb />I soon grew weary of them<lb />And left.<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Gagged To Death<lb /><lb />by JOHN QUINN<lb /><lb />Perhaps it was because he was so quiet that<lb />the bigger boss had called him over for an inter-<lb />view at the main branch. During the bigger bossT<lb />frequent visits to the mortgage branch, he had re-<lb />mained studiously reticent, showing neither ap-<lb />proach-ability nor respect, disguising himself. He<lb />knew silence confused and often annoyed people.<lb />Everyone knows, somehow, that talk is a form of<lb />love. It must have been that way since men began<lb />to grunt and moan at each other. He wondered<lb />whether ants communicated by sounds their<lb />myriadTs singular purpose; perhaps they had<lb />some basic set of clicks or scrapes that only ants<lb />could hear. He wondered what the bigger boss<lb />wished to say to him, what he would say in return.<lb /><lb />The young man had never been to the main<lb />branch before. Perhaps he was going to be trans-<lb />ferred there (was a transfer a promotion?). Per-<lb />haps the bigger boss had not disliked his silence<lb />but instead was merely transferring him for fur-<lb />ther training to the main branch, to this main<lb />building where other young men like himself<lb />handed and received moneys over the long chest-<lb />high marble counters, and counted and receipted<lb />and classified.<lb /><lb />The main branch was a vast, high-ceilinged,<lb />marble-like edifice. The center floor space was an<lb />enormous rectangle. The whole a curious vestigial<lb />church, threatened by no other genusT giant shoe.<lb />It must have cost an enormous amount of money<lb />to build.<lb /><lb />He thought of the cold bright air outside. It<lb />had snowed recently, and what remained had, in<lb />the night, frozen fast. Yet it was pleasant and he<lb />had not minded the cold. He always loved to be<lb />outside in the mornings. He thought of the short<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />walk from the parking lot to the bank for the<lb />interview, the frozen slush crunching hollowly<lb />under his shoes. It was still beautiful, the mute,<lb />far winter air, a buffer zone of light, where the<lb />agents of time could not take him but must wait,<lb />to which he could escape once more.<lb /><lb />Waiting to see the bigger boss, he could en-<lb />vision himself disgraced behind the marble coun-<lb />ters, lost in the endless computations, guilty of<lb />mistake upon mistake, unable even to feel, at<lb />least, equal to his fellows.<lb /><lb />The bank was not yet open for business. Em-<lb />ployees were still coming in. He would look up to<lb />see a young man he had known from the mortgage<lb />branch, a transferee, had taken his place at the<lb />first section of the north counter, nearest which<lb />he sat waiting and behind which, from his vantage<lb />point, he could partially view. Other young men<lb />could be seen farther off, behind the other south-<lb />ern, pillar-sectioned counter. Their being was a<lb />dumb show to him. Yet, he knew that most were<lb />gentle.<lb /><lb />At the eastern, far end of the enclosure was a<lb />center area of darkly polished desks and muted-<lb />toned carpeting. These desks were for minor ex-<lb />ecutives whose task was to interview new custo-<lb />mers desiring loans, projecting deals or opening<lb />new accounts. Behind these desks, facing center-<lb />ward, embedded in the wall, shone the finely lather<lb />and highly polished mechanism of the gargantuan,<lb />steel vaultTs door.<lb /><lb />The young man sat on a couch in a desk area<lb />which was situated immediately left of the en-<lb />trance. A girl he did not know sat at one of the<lb />two desks in this area. The bigger boss had not<lb />yet arrived. He thought of people. He wondered<lb /><lb />11<lb /></p>
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          <lb />what they knew of pleasure, whether they had<lb />any misgivings about it.<lb /><lb />Fight, fight, fight for John McCarlin<lb />Fight, fight, fight for all his men<lb /><lb />And we'll buy a penny gun<lb /><lb />And we'll make the dollys run<lb /><lb />And weTll never have a dolly any more<lb /><lb />II<lb /><lb />The bigger boss he was going to see had a<lb />broken leg. It was almost healed now but the<lb />injury still required crutches. Sometimes he would<lb />be at his desk in the mortgage branch working in-<lb />tently at his mortgage accounts, his Italian-made<lb />addition-multiplication-division, multi-operational<lb />calculating machine rapidly racketing, and a<lb />thump would reach his ears telling him that the<lb />bigger boss had come over from the main branch.<lb />The bigger boss might thump past his desk to the<lb />row of specially built cast-iron ledger-card file bins.<lb />There the bigger boss would lean against the bin,<lb />on the one good leg, and peruse certain mortgage<lb />cards therein, card upon card. It never seemed<lb />to bother him to dig and search; his leg, his<lb />shoulders seemed indefatigable. Even seated at a<lb />desk, checking and cross-checking master cards<lb />and ledger cards and yards long machine-posting<lb />sheets, the bigger boss seemed irreproachable,<lb />oblivious of his numbling cumbersome cast.<lb /><lb />The bigger bossTs name was Dolan. Coincident-<lb />ly, that was the name of the younger manTs father,<lb />the name he would have were he not a bastard.<lb />His mother had once divulged the name to him.<lb />Yet, that he and the bigger boss should be broth-<lb />ers or cousins was a remote chance. Save for a<lb />similar straightness of hair and a certain Celtic<lb />frailty, they were not alike.<lb /><lb />The menTs room was a small one-cubicle room<lb />leading directly into the mortgage office, not plac-<lb />ed in a less conspicuous place. Once the bigger<lb />boss came maneuvering into the menTs room as the<lb />young man was about to leave. It made him think<lb />that the bigger boss must go to the bathroom regu-<lb />larly, habitually, sometimes twice a day, during<lb />business hours. The bigger bossT skin was like<lb />that; he could tell. Also he knew that the bigger<lb />boss would get sunburned easily, despite the heavy<lb />beard. Dolan reminded the young man of an Irish<lb />grocery man he had worked for in his adolescence,<lb />even though the grocery man had had no beardy<lb />stubble. A major part of his job in the grocery<lb />store (at least, the part he most remembered)<lb />was to deliver milk in a monstrous, iron, rattling,<lb />green wagon. Sometimes he would get such mo-<lb /><lb />12<lb /><lb />mentum pushing the green wagon that he must<lb />have looked a fool running around the neighbor-<lb />hood behind it. God knows how many bottles of<lb />milk he broke, rattling over bumps. A few times<lb />the wagon actually tipped over; it only had three<lb />wheels. One time it plunged over when he was<lb />running with it around a corner onto a cobble-<lb />stone street. He was stunned. For a moment after<lb />he and the wagon fell in a crash, he knew complete<lb />happiness and freedom; until shapes and objects<lb />and thoughts returned indiscriminately and with-<lb />out meaning. Then it frightened him, lying on the<lb />ground with the big cross bar handle pinning one<lb />of his legs. He looked up to see faces of people<lb />regarding him as they passed by. However, he<lb />found himself able to pull his leg free and set the<lb />wagon aright. For all their rattling, the two iron<lb />sidewheels of the wagon never broke. Perhaps<lb />that was the misfortune of it, they never did break.<lb />It should have blown up, the wagon, the milk, the<lb />cobble stones, the people, the streets, the grocéry<lb />man; his bathroom, his six Irish Catholic children,<lb />his two gentle pretty daughters!<lb /><lb />The wagon was big enough to hold six cases of<lb />milk and still have the crate-like cover closed.<lb />Sometimes, when he delivered groceries on busy<lb />afternoons, he would put an extra box or two of<lb />groceries on the grate cover. Once, one such after-<lb />noon, when he was going too fast the center front<lb />wheel hit a rut in the asphalt and the big box of<lb />groceries bounced off the top of the wagon. The<lb />tilt came too suddenly for him to save it. Clorox<lb />got onto the meat. He saved what he could of the<lb />box of groceries and delivered it anyway. The<lb />customer, a lady whom he knew and liked a lot,<lb />was very nice about it and she and her beautiful<lb />daughter tried to soothe him, guilty and embar-<lb />rassed as he was over the loss, which was consid-<lb />erable. He offered money towards reimbursement,<lb />but they chided him jokingly and refused it. They<lb />even offered him their customarily large tip. But<lb />it was all destroyed, he knew. Delivering grocer-<lb />ies to that lady and her daughter, entering their<lb />house were the happy moments of his Saturday<lb />afternoons. She, the lady, was the most distant<lb />customer he had; she lived at least five miles off.<lb />Living so far away, the lady would order an<lb />enormous box or two of groceries on Saturdays to<lb />last her family (including a husband, a brother<lb />and a son) for a week. He never minded the long<lb />trip. The lady was always so jovial and friendly<lb />with him, comforting him with her singing, pung-<lb />ent Belfast accent. He wished such a person could<lb />be his mother. If chance had made her his mother<lb />his life would be happy and sweeter. It was al-<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>ways the mother and daughter who received him,<lb />when he delivered; the men of the family were<lb />never home on Saturday afternoons. For some<lb />unaccountable reason, the daughter would always<lb />tease him and jokingly flirt with him. She was<lb />older by five or six years than he. Her teasing was<lb />innocent, almost sympathetic, with no undertone<lb />of cruelty or lasciviousness. He was in love with<lb />her, in love with her frail and soft wide hipped<lb />body. Deep waisted delicate soft and sensual Celtic<lb />princess. Chestnut haired love! Somehow she was<lb />teaching him about love. He was to learn of many<lb />kinds.<lb /><lb />For the short half-hours he stayed there each<lb />Saturday afternoon unloading the groceries onto<lb />the kitchen table, the two women spoiled him as<lb />they must have spoiled their men. Even the sup-<lb />erabundance of food they ordered seemed to at-<lb />test to their heartiness and graciousness. The hap-<lb />pinesses they offered was beyond his experience.<lb /><lb />After what he had done, however, they could not<lb />but despise him, he knew.<lb /><lb />Often, rattling along, he could feel the shame<lb />of life. He sometimes wore a white apron de-<lb />livering which made him feel more conspicuous<lb />when he reflected upon it. But, then the realiza-<lb />tion that he was very young would soothe him.<lb /><lb />III<lb /><lb />He was kept very busy from the very first day.<lb />There was a great amount of accounts to adjust.<lb />It seemed that nobody had done the work for<lb />weeks.<lb /><lb />Adjusting the mortgageeTs accounts, he often<lb />made mistakes. He feared that his incompetence<lb />and his slowness could not long be tolerated, the<lb />presence of the co-workers made it almost impos-<lb />sible for him to raise his head up from his figures.<lb />When the bigger boss appeared and he felt he was<lb />being looked at, he could not move his head at all.<lb /><lb />His one joy then, in the beginning, was that<lb />after work while the weather was still warm and<lb />days still pleasant he would go to a bar he had<lb />found and drink a few beers before he picked his<lb />wife up. The bar had real jazz records which he<lb />played when he could. And for a while he felt<lb />derelict and free.<lb /><lb />But after many times even that was spoiled be-<lb />cause he felt that the people in the bar were get-<lb />ting to know him and he didnTt know what to do<lb />about it. If he could have kept to himself it would<lb />have been alright, but he would watch the drink-<lb />ers and smile at them and enter their conversa-<lb />tions and they would look at him, the stranger,<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />with congenial, blank faces, yet he never spoke<lb />and they were confused.<lb /><lb />IV<lb /><lb />There was another young man in the mortgage<lb />branch. The co-workers gossiped about him. The<lb />other young man was a teller in the downstairs<lb />floor"the subbranch, banking part of the small<lb />two-story mortgage-branch building. He seemed<lb />shy and sensitive, the other young man, yet the<lb />co-workers called him othe goony bird.� oThat<lb />guy is crazy!� they said. oI spend three quarters<lb />of an hour explaining and telling him how to do<lb />something and then I say ~now have you got<lb />that? do you know it now� and he smiles and says<lb />~YesT and then I go away expecting him to do it<lb />and he just stands there smiling to himself. Just<lb />stands there smiling to himself! He doesnTt even<lb />listen! I like to try and help a guy but heTs be-<lb />yond me. Christ! I got enough of my own work<lb />to do. I canTt be watching him every minute. He<lb />winds up with a difference every day; and in the<lb />end all of us downstairs have to try to help him<lb />find it. HeTs impossible! Just stands there smiling<lb />to himself. All day long. The other day he gave<lb />a customer five five dollar bills in exchange for a<lb />five. ThatTs pretty good, hannh! HeTs a corker!<lb />He must be nuts or something.�<lb /><lb />He felt sorry for the other young man because<lb />he was abused. He would wonder what was the<lb />matter, what the lonely teller was really like.<lb /><lb />He did talk to him at the Christmas party. It<lb />was a big affair held at a country club. Toward<lb />the end of the evening he saw the teller sitting by<lb />himself in an isolated corner, away from the<lb />crowd. He was slightly drunk and the feeling of<lb />the party and the Christmas good will ran through<lb />him, and he approached the other. He said, oTell<lb />me what is your real vocation?� The other smiled<lb />softly and answered, his eyes not looking partic-<lb />uarly anywhere, oITm a teller in the National<lb />Band and Trust.� oYes, I know,� he said, his voice<lb />loosened by the liquor, oI know, but you look like<lb />you must be something else too, what I mean is<lb />what are you really?� The other answered smiling,<lb />oITm a teller in the National Bank and Trust,� and<lb />then repeated it again, oITm a teller in the National<lb />Bank and Trust.�<lb /><lb />Disappointed as he became with the otherTs<lb />answer, he could not wholly believe the answer.<lb />He wished he had been able to communicate with<lb />the other, to inspire trust in him.<lb /><lb />The bank discharged the teller after the Christ-<lb /><lb />13<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />mas holidays were over. He wondered where the<lb />other young man went.<lb /><lb />V<lb /><lb />His legs were spread, V like, and his arms rest-<lb />ed on them as he flipped the pages of the business<lb />magazine he held in his two hands, leaning for-<lb />ward. The bigger bossT big blonde secretary<lb />appeared in front of him, over him. She spoke to<lb />him very cheerfully and personally, looking right<lb />into his eyes, surprising him. She said, oHello,<lb />John! What, are you going to be transferred<lb />here?� He answered something about he didnTt<lb />know, that Dolan had called him over for the inter-<lb />view. She said, oGood luck,� smiling, and turned<lb />back into the inside office. A few minutes later the<lb />bigger boss appeared in the inner officesT doorway.<lb />For the first time, he noticed the bigger bossT<lb /><lb />beady blue eyes. He was also surprised to see that<lb />the bigger boss had discarded the crutches for a<lb />cane.<lb /><lb />Inside, the bigger boss said to him, oJohn, ITve<lb />looked over your record and you seem to have done<lb />very well on your test scores. But there is one<lb />thing I am worried about. You donTt seem to say<lb />very much.�<lb /><lb />oT wouldnTt worry about it. I am just that way,�<lb />he said, regretting his clumsy answer. oI can<lb />speak,� he decisively added.<lb /><lb />oI am pretty quiet myself, John,� Dolan answer-<lb />ed. oWell,� he continued, othe people in the mort-<lb />gage branch seem to like you well enough, and you<lb />have done a good job with the Escrow accounts,<lb />which were in a bad state before you came. In<lb />April ITm going to put you in charge of Mortgage<lb />Taxes. How would you like that?�<lb /><lb />oThatTs okay,� he answered.<lb /><lb />T. MTs Solitude<lb /><lb />they called him ~T.M.T when he was young,<lb />before the black clad scythe bearerTs hand<lb /><lb />in a parody, short and viper deadly, unstrung<lb />events leading to the purchase of one horse...<lb /><lb />named Dan.<lb /><lb />they tell me a three foot splinter of seasoned pine<lb /><lb />from the buggy tongue<lb /><lb />sent him, after fourteen days, to this recline;<lb />ounwept, unhonored, unsung,�<lb /><lb />etc.<lb /><lb />HeTs been lying there for thirty some years now;<lb />the shadow from a tall granite stone<lb />never quite clears what was once his brow,<lb /><lb />except in early autumn<lb /><lb />and the low sand mound is winter-wind-swept .. .<lb /><lb />heTs alone.<lb /><lb />even Diane, whose breath quickened at the very<lb /><lb />thought<lb /><lb />of what he once was and could be,<lb /><lb />is not there, but he doesnTt need her;<lb /><lb />anyway, not as she needs him.<lb /><lb />itTs good, too, that she canTt see that twenty-eight<lb /><lb />foot cedar<lb /><lb />whose every leaf and root and limb,<lb />were first nourished by ~T.M.Ts solitude.<lb />how do they say it? oh, yes,<lb /><lb />~limb from limbT.<lb /><lb />14<lb /><lb />"Tom JACKSON<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>LARRYMAN<lb /><lb />by LYMAN HARRIS<lb /><lb />oHold it!� Larry hollered.<lb /><lb />My brotherTs crazy. HeTs really nuts. I bet heTs<lb />been lost 18,000 times and I had to drop what I<lb />was doing every time and go after him. HeTs nuts.<lb />I donTt mean like somebody insane. He just<lb />dreams and wanders around and first thing you<lb />know, heTs way the hell off and nobody knows<lb />where he is.<lb /><lb />YouTd like Larry if you saw him. Especially if<lb />you happen to be a girl. Girls go wild over him.<lb />Older girls I mean... girls my age. ITm sixteen,<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />five years older than Larry, and he just swipes<lb />all my girls. He looks like these kids on magazine<lb />covers, except more real. His hair is sorta brown<lb />and it wonTt comb. It hangs down on his forehead<lb />flat like heTs got bangs or something, and heTs<lb />cross-eyed sometimes. Actually he canTt see too<lb />well outa one eye and when he gets to concentra-<lb />ting he looks cross-eyed. LarryTs always got teeth<lb />missing. He busts Tem out falling outa trees and<lb />stuff. OlT Larry, he wonTt have a tooth in his<lb /><lb />15<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>head by the time heTs twelve. And heTs still sorta<lb />chubby. Not fat. Actually heTs beginning to get<lb />skinny, but his cheeks and legs are still chubby.<lb />His ears stick out a little too, and his pants are<lb />always worn out at the knees, except on Sunday<lb />of course. HeTs always doing something, like fall-<lb />ing out of a tree or getting lost, I mean. YouTd<lb />like olT Larry.<lb /><lb />Last night topped Tem all. Boy, last night. We<lb />were down in the country down near Montgomery<lb />where my kinfolks live. And olT Larryman, he<lb />likes it. He canTt stand Edna. SheTs our cousin and<lb />sheTs his age, but he canTt stand her. She is sort of<lb />a little brat. SheTs got blonde hair, and I usually<lb />like blondes"I dream about Tem"but sheTs a hell-<lb />cat. Rally a spoiled brat, and Larry canTt stand<lb />her.<lb /><lb />Ol Larry stays away from Edna. He doesnTt<lb />even pay any attention to her. Soon as we get<lb />there he trots over to Hattiesburg. Hattiesburg is<lb />what old man Britt named his ranch, if you can<lb />call it a ranch. ItTs one of these old houses with a<lb />leaky-looking roof and all the screens are pushed<lb />in and stretched all over the place. They donTt<lb />look like anybody kicked Tem in; they just look all<lb />droopy and sagging, and I donTt know how they<lb />got that way. ThereTs no paint on the house and<lb />it looks sorta"well, itTs hard to describe, the<lb />color I mean. ItTs sorta like LarryTs tongue when<lb />heTs sick at his stomach. Anyhow, old man Britt<lb />named the whole mess Hattiesburg after his wife.<lb /><lb />But this old house looks like it used to be some-<lb />thing. Like a house Sherman would enjoy burn-<lb />ing, you know. ThereTs a fence around it and at<lb />both front corners there are two cement blocks<lb />with a big concrete ball on each one of Tem. AnT<lb />a mossy looking eagle stands on the ball with his<lb />wings out like heTs fixing to rip loose. But he<lb />never does, and it gives me the willies.<lb /><lb />Like I said, old man Britt owns the place. AnT<lb />old man Britt"ITd just as soon skip him. I used<lb />to think he was a big deal when he would sit out<lb />in front of my uncleTs store and whittle and he<lb />wore these cowboy boots. But now I know. HeTs<lb />nuts. He actually thinks heTs Davy Crockett or<lb />somebody. He bought him a big brown anT white<lb />horse like Trigger and he dresses up like a cowboy<lb />and rides all over the place and everybody thinks<lb />heTs crazy. But he donTt. He thinks heTs the catTs<lb />meow when he does stuff like that.<lb /><lb />And Mrs. Britt, boy. She looks like sheTs had<lb />TB for about a hundred years. SheTs real skinny<lb />and her hair is all balled up on top like one of those<lb />old bed posts, and she keeps working all the time.<lb />I bet sheTs a hundred and fifty at least but she just<lb /><lb />16<lb /><lb />keeps on working. Old man BrittTll be out riding<lb />that stupid horse all over his cotton plants and<lb />everything with everybody laughing at him but<lb />sheTll keep on bringing in eggs and milking the<lb />cows and doing stuff like that.<lb /><lb />She donTt have any help. SheTs got this old<lb />negro named Green, thatTs all the name heTs got,<lb />but he isnTt any help. He just sits on that busted<lb />up old sidewalk that runs around the house and<lb />donTt do nothing. He just sits there, on the side-<lb />walk. And nobody comes to see him. There isnTt<lb />anybody to come to see him, I donTt guess. He<lb />didnTt have any kids and he doesnTt even know who<lb />his folks are. ThatTs why his name is just Green.<lb />Mrs. Britt gives him a little money and lets him<lb />stay in this old shack out back, but mostly he just<lb />sits there on that cracked sidewalk.<lb /><lb />Well, this is what Larry goes ape over. OlT<lb />Green and the sidewalk and those creepy eagles<lb />over him. I could understand if Green was like<lb />Uncle Remus or somebody and told a bunch of<lb />sexy stories, but heTs not. He just sits there and<lb />lets the flies eat him while he eats moon pies and<lb />drinks RCTs. Moon pies and RCTs, thatTs all he<lb />eats, besides sardines. I bet his stomach is so<lb />rotten if he drank coffee or something just that<lb />strong, it would squirt out his navel. HeTs pathetic.<lb />Boy, heTs pathetic.<lb /><lb />I donTt like Larry hanging around him all the<lb />time. ITm afraid he'll pick up bad habits like<lb />picking his nose in front of everybody or some-<lb />thing, but Larry likes him so much I donTt have<lb />the guts to make him quit.<lb /><lb />Everybody always makes fun of old Green. You<lb />know"when they scare the hound dogs with fire-<lb />crackers, they try to scare old Green, too. And<lb />Larry gets mad if heTs around. I donTt know why.<lb />Green canTt remember olT LarryTs name from one<lb />time to the next, but Larry still gets mad when<lb />they pick on him. You gotta watch Larry when<lb />he gets mad, even if he is little. He got mad at me<lb />once, I mean really mad, and he hit me with a beer<lb />bottle.<lb /><lb />Ol Larry got pretty mad yesterday. Some<lb />smart alecks came and they told old Green they<lb />would give him fifty cents if he would run to the<lb />dam road and back as fast as he could. Green<lb />jumped at the chance since fifty cents was Tbout<lb />two years wages to him. He took off running and<lb />these two guys followed him, laughing and cheer-<lb />ing him on. It was pretty funny-looking when I<lb />think about it, cause Green runs sorta like a chick-<lb />en with athleteTs foot, because of his rotten toes,<lb />I guess. Anyhow they hollered at him all the way<lb />to the road and all the way back, and it musta been<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>a mile. Right in front of Uncle EdTs store old<lb />Green was laying it on, hurrying back to that<lb />sidewalk and his fifty cents. Just then Snake<lb />Vines and his wife came out with this big load of<lb />groceries and Green piled right smack into Mrs.<lb />Vines. Boy. Groceries everywhere. Green picked<lb />it all up in about two seconds and nearly wore out<lb />Mrs. VineTs dress dusting it off. Snake didnTt say<lb />anything, but just stared at olT Green until I<lb />thought his eyes would bleed. Green didnTt do<lb />much staring back. He said, oScuse me, Boss.<lb />Scuse me!� about 18,000 times and sorta sashayed<lb />back to his sidewalk. Snake just kept staring-at<lb />him while Mrs. Vines put the groceries in their<lb />truck. And Green crawled about halfway down<lb />one of these cracks in that busted up old sidewalk<lb />and looked at his feet like he was trying to hypno-<lb />tize them. But olT Larry. He stared back at Snake<lb />the whole time. I think he would have cracked<lb />Snake with a rock or something if I hadnTt stop-<lb />ped him. Like I said, you gotta watch Larry<lb />when he gets mad.<lb /><lb />I brushed olT LarryTs hair down in his eyes so<lb />he couldnTt stare any more, but Snake didnTt stop.<lb />He spit in the dirt there in front of the store and<lb />mumbled something to the guys standing around<lb />and they started spitting and staring too. Pretty<lb />soon Snake mumbled something again and they<lb />all nodded their heads and then old Snake got in<lb />his truck and nearly busted the hinges off slam-<lb />ming the door.<lb /><lb />Everybody hates Negroes down there, anyhow.<lb />Even Uncle Ed and heTs a good guy. If two<lb />Negroes are boxing on TV, he roots for the light-<lb />est colored one, even if the light one is from<lb />France or someplace way off. And if both the<lb />Negroes are solid black, Uncle EdTs for the one<lb />in the white trunks. He hates Tem.<lb /><lb />ThatTll help explain what happened last night.<lb />Everybody hating the Negroes, I mean. They<lb />had a big meeting in the field across from Uncle<lb />EdTs house. Everybody came all decked out in<lb />sheets and all that stuff, and I thought it was<lb />against the law but nobody stopped them. There<lb />wasnTt anybody to stop them, I donTt guess, be-<lb />cause the sheriff was there with a sheet on too.<lb />Everybody was there, but the preacher. I guess<lb />he was home watching TV or reading his Bible<lb />or something, because he was the only one not<lb />there.<lb /><lb />Ol Larry and I went over. Larry was pretty<lb />young to be going, I guess, but everybody was<lb />there and I figured ITd take care of him. ThatTs<lb />what I get for figuring. I should have locked him<lb />in the house or something.<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />Well, like I said, we went and, boy, they got<lb />to raising hell. It was just like one of their<lb />church meetings except nobody was washing feet.<lb />Instead they were setting fires and burning these<lb />stupid torches. They got to carrying on about<lb />Negroes and called Tem all kinda things and just<lb />raised hell. I couldnTt figure why because old<lb />Green was the only Negro left around there and<lb />he wasnTt hurting anything. And just when they<lb />started, I looked around and Larry was gone!<lb />It scared the hell out of me at first, but then I<lb />figured he must have gone home, so I didnTt<lb />worry.<lb /><lb />Well, I couldnTt tell what was going on, but<lb />everybody lit torches. I mean everybody! The<lb />whole place was lighted up like a football field<lb />or something. Then they started walking and I<lb />hung with Tem, sorta out on the edge because<lb />the whole thing gave me the willies.<lb /><lb />We walked on down by Uncle EdTs store and<lb />I figured we would go on down the road like a<lb />parade and have some fun, but they turned in!<lb />They went right past the store and by old man<lb />BrittTs ranch towards GreenTs shack.<lb /><lb />All of a sudden the mob stopped and I thought<lb />of something. Holy Cow! I got down on my<lb />hands and knees and crawled like a roach under<lb />Tem just as fast as I could. I crawled through the<lb />whole stinking mob like mad, and good gravey!<lb />It was just what I had been afraid of, except<lb />worse.<lb /><lb />There was old Green inside his shack with his<lb />door locked and you could see that he had every-<lb />thing piled up in the door. Bed and table and<lb />everything. And he was peeking out the window<lb />with his eyes about eight feet wide. And out in<lb />front of the door was olT Larry with a BB gun!<lb /><lb />Everybody was sorta shuffling their feet like<lb />a bunch of bulls and they started moving on to-<lb />ward the shack and olT Larry gritted his teeth<lb />like Humphrey Bogart and hollered, oHold it!T<lb />and shot that BB gun up in the air. I heard the<lb />BB go up and hit on top of Mrs. BrittTs roof and<lb />it didnTt even sound as loud as a wormTs squeal.<lb /><lb />Well, that was it. Snake Vines went after<lb />Larry and I took off to get there first, but this<lb />guy tripped me and I landed right with my face<lb />in the dirt and really got a mouth full. Every-<lb />body was boiling and the big guy that tripped me<lb />sat on my back.<lb /><lb />But olT Larry, he didnTt let up. Old Larryman.<lb />Snake came after him and Larry shot him with<lb />the BB gun and then, boy, then Larry really sur-<lb />prised him. He took that gun by the barrel and<lb /><lb />Continued on page 27)<lb />17<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />oThe Women� (Lithograph) by JIM ROPER<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />18 THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />THE REBEL REVIEW<lb /><lb />oThe CzarT�T<lb /><lb />Peter the Great: Emperor Of All Russia, Ian Grey. J.<lb />P. Lippincott Company. $7.50.<lb /><lb />One of the most dynamic characters ever to<lb />step upon the human stage was Peter the Great<lb />of Russia: a man gifted with an unquenchable<lb />energy and spurred by an ambitious desire. This<lb />great czar planned, labored, and played on a huge<lb />scale to see his backward and semi-barbarous<lb />land become one of the most powerful and re-<lb />spected nations of the world.<lb /><lb />His youth was marked by intrigue and vio-<lb />lence. As a child, Peter saw his friends murdered<lb />before his eyes during the revolt of the Streltsi,<lb />and this proved to be a strong formative influence<lb />in his life. It taught him the meaning of danger<lb />and fear.<lb /><lb />As czar of all Muscovy, Peter had a quenchless<lb />ambition to his country in the galaxy of stars<lb />along with such countries as France, England,<lb />and the Dutch Netherlands. Determined to<lb />oEuropeanize� Russia, Peter became obsessed<lb />with the idea of opening ~~windows to the westTT.<lb />By this, he meant ice-free seaports through which<lb />European trade, culture, and traders could enter<lb />his country.<lb /><lb />Because of his ambition for his country and<lb />his quenchless curiosity concerning navigational<lb />and technical processes, Peter was to change the<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />trend of Russian History. In 1697, the czar<lb />undertook a tour to study the civilization of Eu-<lb />rope at closer range. Upon his return, the Rus-<lb />sian people were shaken from their deep-seated<lb />conservatism by a succession of imperial decrees.<lb />With his own hand, Peter clipped the long beards<lb />of his courtiers while tailors stood by to clip the<lb />Muscovite clothing of the nobles, thus marking<lb />the beginning of European customs into his coun-<lb />try. To orientate his subjects to the culture of<lb />Europ, the czar sent young Russians abroad to<lb />study and invited Europeans to his country. When<lb />the people resisted his will, Peter used the knout<lb />and scaffold to emphasize his decrees.<lb /><lb />A giant in mental attributes, Peter was also<lb />a giant in physical attributes. Massively built,<lb />Peter stood an imposing seven feet. His hand-<lb />some face was dominated by his keenly intelli-<lb />gent eyes. The two characteristics which marked<lb />Peter and his reign were his ever abounding<lb />energy and the grand scale upon which he en-<lb />deavored to fulfill his ambitions.<lb /><lb />In Peter the Great, Ian Grey has presented a<lb />graphic biography of considerable note. His per-<lb />ceptive view of one of historyTs most challenging<lb />figures gives one a deeper understanding of the<lb />Russian people and their background. Mr. GreyTs<lb />versatile style and concrete historical data gives<lb />the reader the most delightful history lesson in a<lb />long, long while. ...<lb /><lb />- FLIP<lb /><lb />19<lb /></p>
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          <lb />(Woodcut) by AL DUNKLE<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>ooA Novel and Two Violin Cases�T<lb /><lb />The Winter Rider, Berry Fleming. Philadelphia: J. P.<lb />Lippincott Co. $3.50.<lb /><lb />This book is about a novelist, William Wesley<lb />Johns. Mr. Johns has just completed a novel, we<lb />are told, and this novel is certain to be a bestseller.<lb />It is to be serialized in a national magazine; there<lb />will probably be a movie, and maybe even a tele-<lb />vision series"in short, fame and fortune are just<lb />around the corner for Mr. Johns, who until now<lb />has scraped along with neither one nor the other.<lb />So Mr. Johns is very happy as he starts out one<lb />fine winter morning to put his manuscript on a<lb />plane (true to the tradition that writers have no<lb />conception of the importance of time, the novel is<lb />later than it should have been, and unless it is<lb />placed on the particular plane which is Mr. JohnsT<lb />objective, the reader senses, there will be dire<lb />results and an unhappy ending for the hero.)<lb /><lb />Naturally, something happens to prevent the<lb />manuscript being placed on the proper plane at<lb />the proper time"actually, several somethings.<lb />First, Mr. Johns picks up a hitchhiker"Jo, who<lb />is a female and a musician and carries two violin<lb />cases with her at all times; moreover, JoTs front<lb />teeth protrude, giving her a odiamond-shaped<lb />smile.�<lb /><lb />Then the car, after a few preliminary groans<lb />and rattles, stops; Mr. JohnsT looking at the motor<lb />does not help, as he knows nothing about motors,<lb />nor does JoTs playing Bach on one of her violins.<lb />The car refuses to move; this would not have<lb />been such a calamity in a civilized part of the<lb />country, but this road happens to be in the east-<lb />ern part of North Carolina, which, the book im-<lb />plies, is at least as bad as being in the wilds of<lb />Africa. There are no houses, no people, and no<lb />other cars"there is, however, a telephone wire,<lb />which Mr. Johns proposes to follow, leaving the<lb />girl in the car. The girl refuses to be left, as she<lb />also refuses to leave the two violins; and, as Mr.<lb />Johns refuses to leave his manuscript, they trudge<lb />into the woods, following the telephone wire"one<lb />man, one manuscript, two violin cases (contain-<lb />ing violins), and one girl with a diamond-shaped<lb />smile.<lb /><lb />In the woods they meet an Indian, with a re-<lb />volver, riding on a mule, who turns out to be a<lb />doctor (the Indian, not the mule). They meet an<lb />old man who needs help burying his dead son;<lb />and, finally, they take a ride down a wild river<lb />with the Indian doctor"a most uncomfortable<lb />ride in the midst of winter. This accounts for<lb />the title, The Winter Rider, I suppose; unless the<lb />girl is The Winter Rider.<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />All this time, the girl Jo has been singing the<lb />praises of art"real art, that is. Art that is fav-<lb />orably received by the public is not true art; since<lb />Mr. JohnsT new novel is destined to be a bestseller,<lb />it is not true art. Therefore, at the conclusion of<lb />the wild boat ride, Mr. Johns consigns his precious<lb />manuscript to a watery grave in the river and<lb />goes to a hotel and goes to bed. The girl disap-<lb />pears.<lb /><lb />Berry Fleming wrote of this book: oIt wasnTt<lb />written to prove a thesis, but to ~beT.�� It seemed<lb />to me that the book did have a thesis, a theory<lb />that true art is too abstract to be understood and<lb />appreciated by the great majority of the people.<lb />It seems to me that the main purpose of writing,<lb />especially, is communication; and if there is no<lb />communication, the purpose for which the work<lb />was written has not been achieved, and it might<lb />behoove the writer to examine his techniques and<lb />style. I realize that the reader, as well as the<lb />writer, must contribute to this process of com-<lb />munication, and that very often the reader is at<lb />fault. This does not mean, however, that the<lb />writer may not be wrong.<lb /><lb />In other words, the fact that a book is a best-<lb />seller does not necessarily mean that it is a lousy<lb />book; nor does the fact that the American public<lb />rejects a book mean that the book is not a great<lb />work of art.<lb /><lb />SHERRY MASKE<lb /><lb />oGrowing Up Is Hard�T<lb /><lb />New Face in the Mirror, Yael Dayan. Cleveland:<lb />World Publishing Company. 1959. $3.50.<lb /><lb />This biographical novel by a young Israeli girl<lb />contains much that is interesting, a fair amount<lb />of good writing, and a large helping of wasted<lb />self-pity. Miss DayanTs theme has been worn<lb />thin by too much use"that growing up is a hard,<lb />discouraging and disheartening process, with oc-<lb />casional and hard-to-come-by compensations.<lb /><lb />Her heroine, Ariel Ron, is so thinly disguised<lb />that she would have done better to call her Yael<lb />Dayan. Her story details the intensely and some-<lb />times pathologically subjective experiences and<lb />feelings of a girl who undergoes two years of<lb />military training in the Israeli Army. The girl,<lb />of course, is herself. Her thoughts about herself<lb />and what happens to her are often complicated,<lb />childish, and, on occasion, too silly to make very<lb />good reading.<lb /><lb />But the insight Miss Dayan gives us into what<lb />army discipline does to women is worth having<lb />and is well presented. Her descriptions of life in<lb /><lb />21<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Israel, when she forgets herself, contain admir-<lb />able and vivid passages, and the familiarity with<lb />which she uses place-names that are enshrined in<lb />the religious conceptions of the western world<lb />lends a refreshing intimacy to some of her scenes.<lb /><lb />She has trouble making personal relationships<lb />interesting or even believable. There is too much<lb />Ariel Ron. Completely irresistable, every man<lb />she meets falls in love with her"which does not<lb />do much for her modesty, since the book is writ-<lb />ten in the first person. Passages like oOur two<lb />beautiful bodies enjoyed each other in the golden<lb />sand under the light of the moon� do not improve<lb />matters. When all her conflicts with herself and<lb />practically everyone else in her story finally re-<lb />solve themselves, you are not quite sure whether<lb />you care one way or the other.<lb /><lb />Despite its faults the book shows promise that<lb />Yael Dayan might some day emerge as an impor-<lb />tant and interesting writer. She has a great sub-<lb />ject to write about"the emergence of Israel as a<lb />national entity of extraordinary influence and<lb />integrity. On the basis of further personal ex-<lb />periences we can hope that she will produce a<lb />better book than New Face in the Mirror on her<lb />next attempt.<lb /><lb />Dr. EDGAR HIRSHBERG<lb /><lb />oStrength Is a Gentle Thing . . .�<lb /><lb />The Hands of Cormac Joyce, Leonard Wibberley. G. P.<lb />PutnamTs Sons. 1960. $2.95.<lb /><lb />In The Hands of Cormac Joyce, Leonard Wib-<lb />berley presents to the Public another rendition<lb />of the venerable literary theme Man versus the<lb />Sea. It is a story without ornamentation and<lb />with an uncomplicated plot. The brief novel deals<lb />with the effects of a severe storm on the life of<lb />a young boy living on a sparsely populated island<lb />off the coast of Ireland.<lb /><lb />The primary account of the book is young<lb />Jackie JoyceTs covetous admiration of the gentle<lb />strength of his fatherTs hands. So devoted to his<lb />father, Jackie develops a ceremony of dipping his<lb />hands into a blessed well so that he upon adult-<lb />hood will have the same gentle, but taciturn<lb />strength. Before the storm, Cormac Joyce in-<lb />jures one of his hands while docking his skiff,<lb />but refuses to leave the island for safety on the<lb />mainland.<lb /><lb />During the storm, Cormac valiantly protects<lb />his family and home in spite of his injured hand,<lb />causing Jackie to realize that strength is a qual-<lb />ity that man must create and nurture within<lb />himself. ;<lb /><lb />22<lb /><lb />Mr. WibberleyTs treatment is so quiet that it<lb />is mediocre, and so simple that it is insignificant.<lb />He does better with his whimsical, usual fantasies<lb />(such as Beware the Mouse, which appeared both<lb />in book form and as the movie The Mouse that<lb />Roared). They are a pleasure to read and, being<lb />unrealistic, tax no beliefs (thus minimizing crit-<lb />icism). In The Hands of Cormac Joyce, little of<lb />that mystic quality or beauty or realism that we<lb />have come to know about Ireland through<lb />OTCasey, Joyce, OTFlaherty. This story could be<lb />anywhere. By picturing Cormac Joyce as not<lb />the best fisherman; or the wisest man on the<lb />island; and by reiterating the axiom that Cormac<lb />Joyce o. .. never answered questions which would<lb />in time supply their own answer .. .TT; does not<lb />render Joyce the Common Man, but just common<lb />characterization. The closest Mr. Wibberley comes<lb />to capturing lyricism is his representing the<lb />storm in Michael ReeceTs children story that be-<lb />gan, oThe young trees were breaking and the<lb />old trees were bending and the giants were coming<lb />into the land.�<lb /><lb />JACK WILLIS<lb /><lb />oThe Cloister or The CastleTT<lb /><lb />The Nunnery, Dorothy Charques. New York: Double-<lb />day and Company. $3.95.<lb /><lb />For her latest novel, Dorothy Charques has<lb />chosen a theme synonymous with English history<lb />"the struggle between Church and Monarch.<lb />The Nunnery is the story of Jane Ingham, a rich,<lb />young heiress, who has been placed in the Cokehill<lb />Nunnery under the guardianship of the Lady<lb />Prioress. It is here in the restful solitude of<lb />Cokehill that Jane is to decide between the clois-<lb />tered life of a nun and that of English Nobility,<lb />and upon her decision rests the future of Cokehill<lb />Priory for Jane has wealth enough to provide for<lb />the nunnery amply. Her decision is complicated<lb />by the appearance of Sir John Acock, owner of<lb />the priory lands and dashing member of Queen<lb />Anne BoleynTs entourage. How and why Jane<lb /><lb />~reaches the decision she does provides educational<lb /><lb />entertainment for the reader.<lb /><lb />Although Miss Charques has handled her his-<lb />torical subject well, she has failed in the develop-<lb />ment of her characters. Jane, whom the plot<lb />supposedly revolves around, seems to be rather<lb />like a guest who makes a dutiful, but unenthusi-<lb />astic appearance during the cocktail hour.<lb /><lb />"FLIP<lb /><lb />THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />oThe Waiting One� (Woodcut) by KAREN McLAWHORN<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960 23<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>oTI stood still and was a tree amid<lb /><lb />99<lb />the wood. . .<lb />A Primer of Ezra Pound, M. L. Rosenthal. New York:<lb />Macmillan Company. 1960. $2.50.<lb /><lb />This small, compact book is an introduction to<lb />Ezra Pound"a short, brilliant excursion into the<lb />framework of his poetic genius. It is the key<lb />which will ultimately allow the interested reader<lb />to enter a o. .. radiant world in which one<lb />thought cuts through another with clean edge, a<lb />world of moving energies.�<lb /><lb />A brief review of PoundTs early development<lb />and his participation in the Imagist Movement is<lb />presented; the author then explains and inter-<lb />prets the poetTs basic areas of thought and their<lb />relationship to his major poem sequences oMau-<lb />berleyTT and the oCantos.� Throughout Rosen-<lb />thallTs approach to Pound, there is an awareness<lb />of the man and his poetry as an integrated unit:<lb />to Pound... opoetry bespeaks the values of<lb />whole peoples...� and, more specifically, his<lb />own values, ideals, and life-purposes. This is dra-<lb />matically evident in Canto 14 as the poet spews<lb />out his own hatred for the banking system of mod-<lb />ern civilization:<lb /><lb />othe soil living pus, full of vermin,<lb /><lb />dead maggots begetting live maggots,<lb />slum owners,<lb /><lb />usurers squeezing crab lice...�<lb /><lb />The thesis which develops PoundTs complete self-<lb />work integration is clearly written and illustrat-<lb />ed; it brings about a definite understanding of<lb />much of the difficult and complex aspects of<lb />PoundTs more serious poetry. In fact, the whole<lb />of the book aims at intensifying the readerTs ap-<lb />preciation of Ezra PoundTs poetry through an<lb />understanding of his basic motives and literary<lb />concepts. The Primer of Ezra Pound has suc-<lb />ceeded in its aim quite admirably.<lb /><lb />DENYSE DRAPER<lb /><lb />oMore Snopes�<lb /><lb />The Mansion, William Faulkner. New York: Random<lb />House. 1959. $4.50.<lb /><lb />This volume, the third of FaulknerTs trilogy,<lb />ties together and brings to an end the Snopes<lb />invasion of Yoknapatawpha County, Mississippi.<lb />Faulkner writes well about the South which he<lb />knows so well, but he is not easy to read. If pos-<lb />sible, one should read the other two books of the<lb />trilogy, The Hamlet, The Town before he reads<lb />The Mansion. It is not that there is any particu-<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />lar continuity which would be missed, since each<lb />of the novels is a unit in itself, but reading them<lb />in order will lead to a better understanding of the<lb />story, the characters and the author since all have<lb />matured with the years.<lb /><lb />The Mansion traced the careers of Mink Snopes,<lb />Linda Snopes Kohl, and Flem Snopes and comes<lb />to a conclusion with the death of Flem at the<lb />hands of Mink with the tacit consent of Linda.<lb />Not one of the main characters is admirable, all<lb />are unreal in their entirety, yet all contain some<lb />universal characteristics.<lb /><lb />In some ways this concluding volume is the best<lb />of the three since it brings out clearly the conflict<lb />of Good and Evil as they clash on Earth, and yet<lb />Faulkner shows Good as triumphing on its own<lb />merits and not over Evil, while Evil eliminates<lb />Evil by its own nature. Faulkner is not specific-<lb />ally pointing out a moral lesson, but in writing a<lb />book which has portrayed Humanity as it is, he<lb />has let Humanity shape its own destiny and has<lb />shown even if by indirection, that Truth and Jus-<lb />tice will be eventually eliminated.<lb /><lb />Faulkner has painted some unforgettable char-<lb />acters"true to life, but exaggerated somewhat<lb />for the effect. Every community has had its<lb />Snopeses to a certain degree, and as long as there<lb />are Snopes there will be Evil and vice versa. The<lb />heartening thing about it all is that although Evil<lb />may win a few temporary victories it will be elimi-<lb />nated in the end.<lb /><lb />Dr. J. ROY PRINCE<lb /><lb />oGerman Poetry�<lb /><lb />An Anthology of German Poetry from Holderlin to<lb />Rilke in English Translation with German Originals.<lb />Edited by Angel Flores. Garden City: Doubleday Anchor,<lb />1960. $1.45.<lb /><lb />This anthology of German poetry is the first of<lb />its kind that I have read. Of particular interest<lb />to me, as a rather weak student of German, is the<lb />presence of the German original following the<lb />translation. This is the first opportunity I have<lb />had to make an immediate, complete, and direct<lb />comparison between the original poem and the<lb />English translation without referring to several<lb />different books.<lb /><lb />The variety of poems included in the anthology<lb />is very wide, and therefore interesting and ap-<lb />pealing to all tastes. There are long poems and<lb />short poems, lyric poems and narrative poems,<lb />classical poems and very modernistic poems.<lb /><lb />Most of the translations are extremely well<lb /><lb />25<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Untitled (Lithograph) by Jim ROPER<lb /><lb />26 THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>done. In most of the cases, the translator cap-<lb />tured not only the thought and spirit of the orig-<lb />inal poem, but also the rhyme, rhythm, and meter.<lb />In others, a poem which had a definite rhyming<lb />pattern in the original German became blank.<lb />verse or even free verse in English. Not being<lb />an expert, nor even a beginner, in translating<lb />German poetry into English metrical forms, I<lb />cannot truly appreciate nor evaluate the difficul-<lb />ties involved in such translations. I realize, how-<lb />ever, that there must be many occasions when a<lb />translator must sacrifice form to thought and con-<lb />tent, to meaning and message.<lb /><lb />There is one mystery, however, that I have<lb />been unable to solve. There are a dozen or more<lb />poems, written by various German poets, but all<lb />translated by Edwin Morgan, which were trans-<lb />lated into a Scotch dialect. So far as I can see,<lb />the original poem is not in a dialectal German.<lb />Other poems translated by Edwin Morgan are<lb />written in the QueenTs English. Why these few<lb />should be in Scotch is a most interesting mystery.<lb /><lb />I have enjoyed this book very much because<lb />the contents would appeal to every and any mood,<lb />and because they introduced to me poets and<lb />poems which are new friends.<lb /><lb />Dr. FRANCES R. WINKLER<lb /><lb />LARRYMAN<lb /><lb />(Continued from page 17)<lb /><lb />cracked Snake right in the gut! Man! He did<lb />him in. OlT Snake just flopped when Larry did<lb />that. Right down in the dirt holding himself.<lb /><lb />And everybody stopped. It was crazy. They<lb />all stopped and just stood there looking. They<lb />stared at Snake lying in the dirt and they stared<lb />at Larry. OlT Larry gritted his teeth at them.<lb />Then one of them threw his torch down and<lb />walked off sorta ashamed and disgusted looking.<lb />Like he was disgusted with himself. They<lb />watched him go and then they all walked off<lb />just like that. The whole mob, even olT Snake.<lb />And I could see them throwing their torches<lb />down gradually as they went.<lb /><lb />Boy! That Larryman! HeTs nuts!<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb />STEINBECKTS<lb /><lb />oSmart Clothes for College Men�T<lb /><lb />STEINBECKTS AT FIVE POINTS<lb /><lb />Phone PL 2-7076<lb /><lb />Compliments of<lb /><lb />OLD TOWNE INN<lb /><lb />STEAKS, SEAFOOD AND<lb />BETTER LUNCHES<lb /><lb />Greenville, N. C.<lb /><lb />Phone PL 8-1991<lb /><lb />/<lb />A. B. ELLINGTON &amp; CO.<lb /><lb />BOOKS, STATIONERY AND<lb />OFFICE SUPPLIES<lb />422 Evans Street<lb /><lb />Greenville, North Carolina<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb />Ss<lb /><lb />4<lb /><lb />Be Sociable<lb />Have A Pepsi<lb /><lb />The Light Refreshment<lb /><lb />27<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />(Lithograph) by NELSON DUDLEY<lb /><lb />oSouthern Gothic�<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />28 THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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        <p>
          <lb />
          <lb />BELK-TYLERTS bere<lb />The shopping center for men and women of CAM PUS CORN ER<lb /><lb />EAST CAROLINA COLLEGE oDEDICATED 10 :A.<lb /><lb />YOUNG MANTS TASTE�<lb />~Save with Safety�<lb />At 5th and Cotanche<lb /><lb />aI BEL TYLSR'S Grisnrvitie, Ue.<lb /><lb />TJRADE-MARK REG. VU. S. PAT. OFP.<lb /><lb />COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA<lb /><lb />bas�<lb /><lb />COMPLIMENTS OF<lb /><lb />Student Supply Stores<lb /><lb />oFIRST IN SERVICE�<lb /><lb />Your Center for:<lb /><lb />PAPERBACKS COLLEGE SUPELIES<lb />STATIONERY SOFT GOODS<lb />GREETING CARDS<lb /><lb />Wright Building and South Dining Hal! Ground Floor<lb /><lb />FALL, 1960 29<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />oHeading Home� (Linoleum Cut) by AL DUNKLE<lb /><lb />30 THE REBEL<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />
          <lb />|<lb /><lb />pee<lb />p-<lb />Y<lb />a.<lb />, |<lb />V4<lb /><lb />*<lb />2.<lb />4<lb />es<lb /><lb />"_<lb /><lb />a. 3,<lb />By Y<lb />m.,? 3<lb /><lb />WA NNN<lb /><lb />a aed<lb />tee ene &amp;<lb />oo ~ .<lb /><lb />oThe Pick-up�<lb />FALL, 1960<lb /><lb /></p>
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          <lb />Say what you mean with the best-<lb />selling guide to clear, concise writing.<lb /><lb />THE ELEMENTS<lb />OF STYLE<lb /><lb />by Wm. Strunk, Jr., and<lb />E. B. White<lb /><lb />Your bookseller has it. $2.50<lb />MACMILLAN<lb /><lb />LLEY<lb /><lb />on Life Savers:<lb /><lb />SHE<lb />SB,<lb /><lb /><lb /><lb />VILLAGER SPORTSWEAR<lb /><lb />oBASS WEEJUN� LOAFERS<lb /><lb />(men and women)<lb />Exclusive at<lb /><lb />afl Gp<lb /><lb />222 EAST FIFTH STREET<lb /><lb />Student Charge Accounts Invited<lb /><lb />Music Arts<lb /><lb />COMPLETE<lb />MUSICAL<lb />LINE<lb /><lb />Hi-Fi - Instruments - Records<lb /><lb />Phone PL 8-2530<lb />318 EVANS STREET<lb /><lb />GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA</p>
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