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The Sacramento Bee from Sacramento, California • 52

Location:
Sacramento, California
Issue Date:
Page:
52
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

'110VOMEW411 1-----7- r) 4 0 Page Cl? Double Feature Our Hoarding House Out Our Way FHE SACRAMENTO BEE Thursday September 8 1966 I Good Music Marks UCD Twoconcert' LOOK! A POLIaLE-EARRELEDIr SCHEME FOR PISCOLIZACIIN1 NICHT Al RPS 004 THE GARBAGE CAN! A ma mE5 OFF THE i ku LIP Aki' GETS A TN CANI SHOWER IF THAT POESNT SENIP HIM PACKINI) THE NOISE WAKES ME ANI1 I GIVE HIM i A Frrm COLD SHOSALR! ME AN' i HIM 4 OLD li vo YOU 'THINK TIA WAY YOUR OLD I YOU'RE Losike SCHEMEC APS PETER- I uR STUFF A IN6 oisr YOU NEED 4 COUPLE MORE 6LIFG 60MET4ING REALLY uxe TIAAT ANO YOU'LL i3E AS I-IONttST AS A 6U(LOiNC PERMITS ON CAS1-IER IN THE i-IE MOON1WITH A I I ViEW OF THE EARTA A -10S5ED IN! SOMk0W I NEVSA SAW "OU AS A PHILANITIAOPIST BEFORE3Aiq SOT l'HE MA3OR PICK60 UP 146 Dou6i-k QuicKER TN JACK DEMPSEY'S 1IIMEIEEPER! (BRILLIAkrriAKIE7 MOW LETS HEAR SOME BRILLIANT EkPLANATIONS -to GIVE -rHE NEIGHBORS WHEN THE COMPLAINTS START COM 11Q6 NOLIVE GOT FIVE MINUTE5 TO DISMAINTL THAT A BRAINSTORM! 5TAIZT COMIK)6 KM 'a-I'VE 60T FIVE AllkILJTE5 TO D15- MANITLE THAT BRANI5TORMI In Hamburg a Topless Tangiers Wrestle In Goo If well the you I hand the tion ing a By William Glackin it 'UNWORNammo By Nino Lo Bello Soetial to The Bee Sot Bo FT tt110 tfr' 011) ----''77-7---- 1---- r-Li i ----r--- i 1 0 1 i t'd 1 I 1 4 -z- 0 z--- 111 1 1 Ilf N4 izi- i 1 I 7t7 li )'-' r'' 1 4t I '77-fr 41L A'-' 1 0 7 -1t 40-y i' I 1 Or 1 I I'' 014'4 11 If i 111 orl Ir' 0: 14 t' I PO I' i i i ti-f k'''' ii Z12 04 01 1' 1 II 0 ri 4 a Pti tl 1 LX 41 Id 1-9 4 '4 6 NIA gliVil 3AKE IHS BUSINES5: 1 I C1 Stle 14-1 1 4-(476 114 11 41111)1 -'I '''Se4tt InomINFA CT7 A A WES A 8 81 0 Ji 4s fo3 Va WHY MOTHER5 6ET aRAY 1 A i10))4 Sit 11 I 11A1U'i'l 01s 01 1'7 tit LIV AA en-rwc Pd elMT AV Solid I' 4 116 IT ceA AI4 EA' CHOICE TO ittAkE! alTHE OTHEZ HAND IF I MC HE'LL BUMP 1415 I1'5 EITHER MY NECK OR NIG HEAD I CAN'T SIT LIKE Ti415 FOREVER tIAV NECK IS WINS STIFF! 61(1 NECK 15 GE TIN5 STIFF! AUNI! el A I 1' elt a 14i Pt i I -Cf 7cal -41" 011111111111 1' Nancy tecturally for Wagnerian roles at the Metropolitan Opera struts forward and bows Her adversary also on the hefty side but somewhat shorter waddles out with a gaily colored cloak and nods menacingly at her introduction As soon as they get their instructions from the referee both Amazons peel off their capes There they stand now in their battle uniforms bathing cap and monokini trunks The audience at the tables gasps then claps At the whistle the fighting commences and within the time of a half-Nelson the topless tanglers are coated with the goo Both grapplers know their stuff Both have fairly good basic knowledge of the traditional holds which they put into spectacular use as they roll tumbl flop bounce wobble squirm toss and wallow in the gelatinous muck After a while you can hardly tell the contestants even with a scorecard as they put arms legs and heads into all kinds of anatomical contortions The New Champion At the end of round three for reasons unfathomable to every spectator the referee steps in and proclaims one of the two mud cats the winner and new champion The tussle over both of the gal gladiators lumber off to the show ers while the crowd guzzling more of the spiritus frumenti awaits the next match Altogether there are eight girls who take turns wrestling each other Once a night the management stages a free-for-all and the wrestling octet has a simultaneous go at each other Sometimes devil-may-care tourists even get into the act for which the management is always apparently grateful However a customer who's had several rounds at the table never quite finishes the first round when he mixes with the pros on the mat Ach du lieber Gott such a katzenjammer picnic! There are some Hamburg citizens who maintain that the overseeing Bismarck statue isn't really showing disapproval to all these goings-on They say old Otto is burned Up over the fact he can't come down from that perch and join in the fun HAMBURG This city's reputation as a naughty city is based on nothing more naughty than a twist on the law of supply and de-mild Simply put you bring the supply (of money) and demand (a share of the fun) Running some 500 yards through the Sankt Pauli district of Hamburg is a goodtime-Charley neighborhood a bulb-happy spur where the flamboyant night life in store for any tourist begins at 8 o'clock and shutters down the next morning at 4 To watch over the ultra in wickedness is the most talked about police station in Germany Sandwiched among the come-on cabarets is the Davidwache Station which proclaims its presence with a o-foot-high sign reading "POIRET" that blinks at you in capital neon letters The busy staff includes a squad of cops which handles trouble in seven languages fluently Also standing guard over all the nocturnal proceedings is a grotesque statue of Germany's 19th century empire builder the tough old Prussian militarist Otto von Bismarck The cold black stone from which Bismarck was carved only serves to emphasize the stern face of the disapproving statesman as he helplessly watches the Elbe River waterfront go through its erbote bawdiness night after night Most Awesome Perhaps the most awesome show in this Hanseatic port is a gimmick called the "Damenringkampf in Schlamm" Hamburg is the only city that boasts a spectacle like this The Damenring-etc is a wrestling match but with a few earthly innovations The bouts are staged in a small ring filled with a generous supply of rich squishy mud into which the two opponents In a matter of minutes this glob manages to pop-art the fightin1 frauleins from stem to stern It's the dirtiest show in town The scrap starts when a mock referee comes out and plants himself behind a plastic sheet He blows a whistle and from behind the curtain a towering long robed redhead who could qualify archi YES AND MY FEET HURT-THE HEAT MAKES MY SHOES FEEL TIGHT WHY NOT PUT ON THE COMFORTABLE SHOES YOU'VE GOT 44644ikVoMeoLV THESE ARE THE MOST COMFORTABLE SHOES I'VE GOT 7 te 1 PO NI-004 owned ooem 614 YES AND MY WHY NOT PUT ARE THE MOST BOY FEET HURT-THE HE 1 COMFORTABLE SHOES IT'S HEAT MAKES MY COMFORTABLE rvE GOT HOT SHOES FEEL TIGHT SHOES YOU'VE TODAY GOT NI r19: OK z--- 110' I 44 (-7N -0 r0-' -62 2 11: 1- 6 -7-------- IV Atli 4-Y' ub r'C' al 0 0 1111111110 44 II ra-atut----- It Lt 6 111 6 61: iv 0) sAtn lip 4- -444644ikVoUtoLV ig Awe Nit imil kulor- CCN- CON heists To ile 1 PO Oil -Al tiko1 EV Vit I P'154A-tittee started to chime the hour in the middle of one of the movements the faint sounds created a special mixture that should have delighted the composer's ear But the old master of the avant garde John Cage was a match for anybody Pianist Marvin Tartak began the second half of the concert with 20 minutes of sonatas and interludes from Cage's "Music for Prepared Piano" the clear masterpiece of a brilliant mind Cage's famous preparations as you may know consist of a very precise series of additions to the piano strings (screws rubber bands and the like) for the purpose of ing the pitch or tonal color of some notes The score makes fascinating use of these possibilities The notes themselves seem at times almost conventional in style for all their dissonance but they come out of the piano with arrestingly original effects as beautiful as they are brilliant Much of the music is drenched with the atmosphere of the Orient the pieces echo with temple bells and gongs and tempt you to look around for one of the gamelan orchestras of Bali Tartak played it all with subtle feeling and great authority To hail these works with such enthusiasm is not to slight "The Sound Machine" a brand new work by Philip Krumm a Davis resident since last spring This is an I8-minute work for five instrumentalists and singer based on a simple idea: the instrumentalists take turns sounding a steady pulsing series of notes (of various color shape and intensity) like the tolling of a bell against this tolling the others make short frequent and usually violent ensemble cries The sounds themselves were fascinating the idea itself begged for a little variation after about 10 minutes or so Roman Haubenstock Ramati's "Liasons" is a 10-minute work which poses "live" vibraphone and xylophone against a taped score for the same instruments It is full of vigorous atonalism and the dual effect is interesting and even ghostly as if a man were engaged in wrestling his own shadow The performance demonstrated again what a brilliant percussionist Stanley Lunetta is There were times when the NME's improvisations were just as fascinating as this written music It should also be added that if the men in the group really appreciate Miss Alexander's thoughtful vocal contributions they ought to quiet down once in a while so she can be heard Donald Dock The adventurous New Music Ensemble of the University of California at Davis tried another novelty again last night a "twoconcert" split into halves starting at 5 and 9 pm with a couple of hours for dinner in between Musically it was an unusually rewarding occasion As for the "twoconcert" idea the evening failed to provide a satisfactory answer for the natural question: "Why?" One answer of course is "Why not?" At any rate the facts are that each half of the concert ran to only about an hour and 15 minutes of music including a ten-minute intermission each time which add up to about the amount of music one would get in the usual concert leaving one with a rather large amount of time in between One's reaction I suppose would depend on whether a two-and-a-half-h interval seemed an appealing idea At any rate most of the audience came back for the second half They were seated onstage with the performers in Freeborn Hall a device which succeeded admirably in tying the listener to what was happening As for the program which was evenly divided between the NME's free atonal improvisations and written scores by contemporary composers it struck me as one of the most successful in the NME's history Several of the improvisations seemed well above average in is to say in the relationships developments and dynamic contrasts which heighten musical interest for most three of the written pieces were absolutely brilliant Joel Chadabe's "Prelude to Naples" is a 10-minute work in I2-tone style for piano flute clarinet and cello not previously performed on the west coast It evokes feelings of beauty and violence through precise inventive and highly musical means: carefully the composer builds up in the ensemble a series of shimmering screens of tense dissonance and then poses against these screens short sudden flashing flickering solo statements sometimes quiet sometimes excited and always in interesting contrast to the background In addition he poses the various musical colors of the instruments against each other in careful compelling ways It is a fascinating piece and under Larry Austin's direction it was exquisitely and passionately performed by respectively Thomas Gentry Barbara Johnson Wayne Johnson and Fred Utter "Obos" composed this year by Harold Budd is a series of musical settings which envelop like delicate affectionate mists 10 haiku poems The poems which salute in jewel-like language the poet's delight in dawns and butterflies the heat of summer afternoons and the noontime silence which lies across flower fields were read by Billie Alexander a regular member of the NME The musical settings which continued for a time beyond the end of each poem were realized with an intense sensitivity by Stanley Lunetta and Arthur Woodbury on chimes and gongs and a celeste The combined effects were stunning The music had a fragile beauty that was irresistible and infallibly atmospheric its soft sounds like the ripples in a pool the dartings of dragonflies or the echoes of memories And when the campus carillon THEY'RE VERY 300E CARDS DEPICTING COLORFUL SCENES Or THE SEASON ON EXPENSIVE PAPER '--LN FULL COLOIL:" THEY'RE VERY GOOD cARDS DEPICTING COLORFUL SCENES Or THE SEASON ON EXPENSIVE PAPER --1N FULL 1 ON 1 1 -1-4itPb 'lb' a 1 1 Flee Welt Diseev Proilectione World Rights Reserved II -0104 11 11 AND -rHey I'LL 'TAKE sr Welt Disney Proilection COST ONLY A BOX! 'Ar II I 1Werld Rights Reserved $3 FOR THAT WAG 01' FIFTY! A LOVELY 1 SALES TALK ------lr 1 oc- i el 1 IP' mo- 1 rei 1 Till :1 1t mi iv )- Ition----- -40P ---1- ftP LI --) 1111111111111 WAS IT REALLY A LOVELY SALES -TALK? WAS ALITovREELAyLLY 4ALES -TALK? 1 Ina irm We of sp wit film to tr3 nine Ea1 on ti threw shifte dumr No mond tract queer eight with' West Sou Ans cial resen their other witho they tiles of nel em knowi water larva' These montl esting specie newt climb to a are It is is hol spend land the' large chang velop and 1-CIC '2111 it Captain Easy ----7 EA5y! wiol klOU NEDDLIN 50 buiPPER RAT! KANE SUITED THI5 SIN TOO 02D gOw VOO REFORMED -COH-yectil EH rAIN5ON THIS IS IN ()Nice TOO 01FLEokyll gOW VOL) REFORMED ') EHICAW50k1 3 1 ts I'LL TRY TO LOCATE DAWSON ROW GO FIND A PHONE AO CALL COAST G1JARP! 'ref ILL TRY TO LOCATE DAW5C04 ROW it Go FIND A PHONE AO CALL :0 SE COAST CARP! at CAREFUL EA5Y1 Ao 4 $'s j) rtuAlb--- All" ''''-OT-- a 17 v- Itr 0 V' 4 I I 4Y -A 't ATAlitz i Ailli VIN 'M a 0 Ii1-4--- 1 x444-E 4-'''''' -10-' VIOVI IL 17 allit'-a itoki got- 61 '''''gfit: lin Ill --1 'oil lir 1ez 't4'N't N't :1 A is 4 17398 s11 f4r yr: 0:71 lp ihp 0 4( 40 A '14 A -41 1 A ci 1 itco-ilf- -1k- 1-477-4-1-411 I i 'MA by Nt A Ir If lt Pl arsh a n' Personal Appeals To India's Notables Work By Conrad Fink Alley Oop WAIT! COME BACK! NOURE MY CUSTOMERS! WAIT! COME BACK! NOURE MY CLISR3MERS! I-IEV OVER TO WHERE ALLEY'S rGOIN PLACE! 1----- 401 :437 --) 4 71 NO irt41" NOYOU PON'T GIVE OOP STAMPS! i'il? 6vi NOT ANY NONOLI PON'T i I ocec MORE! GIVE OOP STAMPS! stAr- fl zz cy (1''''D it sib oN 044 tr--) Lp75 I---4 il11 ino tt rc- 44-1 AS ys-AE 4 1 4 "I' 1 00P (47-40 tl ottt1 ---4 6---s11 tv( itsPt4a" 4'' yli v'tA-' t-- fr'---- Nei i 1 71MWF i 'fir''4 5 A r--- 2i- 4 K--' -A-- Ct--- -i 11 i 1 7:1 cc -1 I' 4 c--- f''s 1FSS''' -'-'4 (-1 -tt4i11' i --Zwe Gcm4- '7- 98 41111Mb' 96s MIA in tt tl Po Off OW MY COME ON LOOK! SOODNESS! LET'S GO! Ili -1 --ke it 'It '11r4I' 1 a Itt lift vG kt1(6 P- 4 1 it I 1 i I It- l' a-- -9-11 1 Barefoot Walk on Hof Street Hospitalizes Boy FREDERICKSBURG Va (AP) Charles Hart Jr 19 is sorry he tried to walk barefoot across the street He parked his car about 4 pm Monday without taki ng time to put on shoes Temperatures in the 90s had melted the asphalt Before he was halfway across Hart was stuck Two teen-agers rescued him and carried him to a hospital emergency room A doctor found Hart a lost completely the skin off the soles of both feet "From now on wear shoes" Hart said Miss Peach 0 1 -N WELLVE5 TI-ERE ARE TEN EIKYLEScoNS PLUS MAYBE ABOUT me INCREPIBIN PIFFICULT ONE5 CAN YOU MAUS TEACH ME TO MAW FRANCINE1: IN ONIN 'TEN EMY LESSONS Berry's World LET -FRANCINE TEACH YOU 1-tow To PRAW IN 10 EAsy LoEssoNsf and returned her "namaste" salutation of hands folded be fore the face in a prayerful attitude Very Businesslike Mrs Gandhi can be business like to the point of brusqueness and she was this morning as she moved down the line asking a quick question here accepting a petition there A sad-faced young widow of a soldier killed on the China front in 1962 asked the prime minister to overrule a government official who ordered her evicted from army housing Mrs Gandhi turned to a secretary and ordered an investigation A Hindu priest Manik Lal 52 explained he is unemployed because his temple in central India is run down and he has no money to repair it He asked Mrs Gandhi to "set it right so people can come and worship" Mrs Gandhi passed his petition to a secretary and the priest turned away offering to read bystanders' palms for a fee The whole thing took just a few minutes and the 48-yearold Mrs Gandhi walked quickly back into her house The petitioners seemed satisfied that they had seen India's First Lady passed on their complaints and now could trust in the gods Quick Action A personal secretariat of 50 persons handles the followup of the daily darshan and 600- 700 letters that arrive each day They send urgent cables or letters to local officials involved and order a quick re-ply-Mrs Gandhi's personal letter-head helps break through the bureaucratic maze surrounding any individual Indian who has troubles NEW DELHI India Westerners don't understand it and Indians cannot really explain it but "darshan" helps make the wheels go around in India That being the case astute Indian politicians pay plenty of attention to this Hindu phenomenon Darshan roughly translated means obtaining special merit favor or godliness by touching speaking to or merely being near a notable person As practiced it means every Indian has a right to personally meet high-ranking officials and present complaints or grievances That's where the politics comes in Hundreds Of Petitioners Each day hundreds of Indian petitioners with a wide assortment of problems gather in the streets and gardens outside the homes of national and state officials who welcome this exposure to voters Prime Minister Indira Gandhi though busy with affairs of state sets aside a period each morning to grant darshan in the garden of her home A tent-like "shamiana" is erected to ward off monsoon rain showers Carpets are laid over the muddy grass and chairs are put out for the sad and solemn who come Mrs Gandhi's darshan started shortly after 8 am one day after her personal secretary had screened out obvious cranks and security risks from petitioners standing in the street: About 25 person from babes in arms to aged grandfathers were waiting as the prime minister came out of the house wearing a brown and green sari Everyone present Jumped to his feet I 1 I 1 5L--) 11 6 ttIELL? 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Pages Available:
4,934,533
Years Available:
1857-2024