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"All the News About Hal that Hal Deems Fit to Print"
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=====================================================================
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AUG/SEPT. 1994 ~ Ite in Orcum Directe ~ Volume 3, Issue 5
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_____________________________________________________________________
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Publisher: Harold Gardner Phillips, III
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Editor-in-Chief: Hal Phillips
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Virtual Editor: Dr. David M. Rose, Ph.D.
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Managing Editor: Formletter McKinley
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Production Manager: Quinn Martin
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Lifestyles Editor: Decedrick Gainous, Esq.
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Living/Arts Editor: Alex Beam
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Dead/Government Editor: Vincent Foster
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Circulation Manager: Ronald Goldman
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Weapons Consultant: Carlos "The Jackal"
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Sports Editor: Orenthal James Simpson
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Latter Day Editor: Orrin Hatch
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Spiritual Consultant: Cardinal Mannix
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Editorial Offices: The Harold Herald
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30 Deering St.
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Portland, ME 04101
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Satellite Office: c/o Golf Course News
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38 Lafayette St.
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P.O. Box 997
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Yarmouth, ME 04096
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Letters to the editor are welcome and
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encouraged. The Herald reserves the right to edit them to fit, or to
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completely change their meaning to suit our ends.
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ARCHIVE SITES:
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world.std.com (obi/Zines/Harold.Herald)
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fir.cic.net (pub/Zines/Harold.Herald)
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etext.archive.umich.edu (pub/Zines/Harold.Herald)
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Subscription requests to drose@husc.harvard.edu
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Submissions welcome
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THIS ISSUE: FAME AND FORTUNE (WELL, FAME ANYWAY) GRACE THE HERALD
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HAL INTERVIEWS A REAL COLUMNIST
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AN ENTIRE GENERATION IS CASUALLY REVILED
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WE ACKNOWLEDGE THE EXISTENCE OF OTHER PUBLICATIONS
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HOLLYWOOD TREMBLES AS THE HERALD GOES TO THE MOVIES
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SULLIVAN OFFERS PERSONAL GLIMPSES OF A DRUNKEN MADMAN
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NUPTIALS AND NAUSEA WITH TIM DIBBLE
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AND, OF COURSE, YOUR LETTERS, ALTHOUGH THEY AREN'T
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ACTUALLY YOUR LETTERS BECAUSE YOU HAVEN'T SENT ANY
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LETTERS, HAVE YOU, YOU UNGRATEFUL BASTARDS
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WE'RE FAMOUS!
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By HAL PHILLIPS
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The people have spoken and, by Jove, they clearly want more!
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If, by chance, you've spent the previous six weeks strapped to the
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underside of a Winnebago, you might not realize The Harold Herald and
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its staff have become stupendously famous following a brief mention in
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The Boston Globe, which prompted a call from WCVB-TV in Boston and a
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front-page feature in the Portland Press Herald.
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Carpenters are here this week widening the top halves of doorways.
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Subscription and reprint requests are now being handled via our new
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toll-free number 1-800-BOW-TO-ME.
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An elderly, often drunk colleague of mine at The Marlboro Enterprise
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used to bristle when awards - garnered by the newspaper or myself -
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were announced in the publication. I would invariably bury the short
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stories somewhere inconspicuous (usually an inside page) so as to
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avoid the appearance of tasteless self-promotion - a practice that
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drove my pickled colleague to distraction.
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"You can't be afraid of self-promotion!" he would bellow, the smell of
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vodka and Marlboro's enveloping anyone within spitting distance. "No
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one's going to do it for you!"
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My colleague (see related story) had a keen eye for the obvious - but
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he also had a point.
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It was his sound advice that compelled me to send a copy of the Herald
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to the Globe's Alex Beam, who saw fit to mention the newsletter in his
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column of July 20 - apparently a very slow news day. St. Alex gave the
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Herald three lines, naming it the second best self-published
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newsletter in New England behind "Owens: A Newsletter about Gardening
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and Cooking."
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This makes our Herald the most esteemed self-published, non-cooking &
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gardening publication in New England!
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It's amazing what a little self-promotion and a few lines in the Globe
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can do for circulation. We've been swamped with subscription requests
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and Chronicle - a news magazine show produced by Ch. 5 in Boston - has
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shown some interest in doing a "piece."
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The Press Herald then published a front-page feature (and picture!) on
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Tuesday, Aug. 2, another slow news day. For the record, my story
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appeared higher on the page than news of Michael Jackson's marriage to
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Lisa Marie Presley.
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"Until two years ago," reporter Ray Routhier wrote, "not a single
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publication could give readers comprehensive, up-to-date information
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about Harold Phillips. But one man came forward to fill this crucial
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void - Harold Phillips."
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My old Enterprise editor James O'Reilly got some pretty good ink in
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the Press-Herald story ("Who else could write a newsletter about
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himself and not have everyone throw it away immediately?"), as did the
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lovely Sharon Vandermay (for her timely Limbaugh-bashing) and my mom,
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whose memories of my "unspeakable acts" with vacuum cleaners were
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reprinted and have surely ruined my political career.
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With all this attention, there has been some fear the staff's ego -
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already substantial and nearly unmanageable in size - may now grow out
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of control. Hey, you can count on it!
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I'm here to assure you the Herald will continue to provide "All the
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news about Hal that Hal deems fit print" with all the bombast and
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pretension you've come to expect.
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Garcon! Caviar, for EVERYONE!
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AN INTERVIEW WITH OUR BENEFACTOR
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BY HAL PHILLIPS
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The Boston Globe doesn't quite know what to do with columnist Alex
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Beam. He sort of discovered The Herald with a brief mention in his
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column, which now appears in the Living/Arts section. However, his
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column has appeared as part of the business section and on the
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editorial page, where the Globe tried to pass him off as a
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conservative. Ha! In any case, his mention of the Herald touched off
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the flood of media attention so, hereafter, he will be known as St.
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Alex. The fortyish Beam chatted with us from the Big House on
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Morrissey Boulevard.
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HH: How has reading The Harold Herald changed your life?
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AB: Um... It's made me realize what one person with a computer can do
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to make the world of publishing a better place.
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HH: That's touching.
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AB: Why, thank you.
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HH: What is your favorite color?
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AB: I know it's not brown because I'm married to a Norwegian and they
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have a predilection for brown... Actually, it's blue.
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HH: That's interesting. I've heard you mention your wife before in
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print. I was actually engaged to a Norwegian, but it blew up in my
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face.
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AB: Well that was your mistake: Getting engaged to an explosive,
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inanimate object.
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HH: When they make the movie of your life, who will play you?
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AB: In my published-but-never-read-by-the-public novel, I note that I
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bear an incredible resemblance to George Segal, or a young Richard
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Dreyfus - the American Graffiti Richard Dreyfus. Either could be
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recruited to play the mature Alex Beam.
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HH: Name your least favorite cartoon character?
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AB: I don't like Ren and Stimpy.
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HH: Why?!?
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AB: Because they're really bad, really violent and they should be done
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away with. And their creator should be shot in the head. But I love
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Beavis and Butthead.
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HH: I won't even touch that incongruity.
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AB: Thank you.
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HH: Complete the following sentence: "Dip me in honey and
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throw me to the ...
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AB: Bees.
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HH: Boring.
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AB: Yeah, that is boring.
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HH: If you were a head of lettuce, what variety would you be?
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AB: Iceberg.
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HH: Complete the following sentences: The Boston Globe would be a
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better paper if...
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AB: Um, if my column ran in 20-point type on the front page every day.
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HH: The Boston Herald would be a better paper if...
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AB: If my column ran in 20-point type on the front page every day.
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HH: If The Harold Herald weren't flawless, what might improve it?
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AB: I think the occasional serendipitous error would be seen as such
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an incredible anomaly, it would be viewed as pleasurable by readers
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accustomed to such excellence.
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HH: What was the first album you ever purchased with your own money?
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AB: Rubber Soul.
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HH: What type of car do you drive?
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AB: A little Jap job. Cheapo Honda Civic.
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HH: Regular unleaded or premium unleaded?
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AB: For the Honda, regular. For the Dodge van, premium. When you get
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to be my age, you worry about engine wear.
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HH: Where were you when Apollo landed on the lunar surface?
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AB: Well, that's a trick question. I was in Leningrad reading it on
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the back page of Pravda.
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HH: Honestly?
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AB: It's true.
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HH: Did you ever contact the KGB whilst in Leningrad.
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AB: Every day.
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HH: Do you consider yourself a Baby Boomer?
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AB: I've researched the topic and yes, I am.
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HH: What went wrong with you people anyway?
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AB: Baby Boomers have ruined everything. They have destroyed the
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world. They're self-obsessed. Their obsession with the past is very
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dangerous. I saw the other day that nostalgia is a very minor emotion.
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If ants had emotion, they would have nostalgia. It's the elixir, the
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balm of the small mind.
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Retrospection gone awry: Baby Boomers
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mark moon landing with trademark cant
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BY HAL PHILLIPS
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Okay, I admit it. I haven't the faintest clue as to what I was doing
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or where I was that July evening when messrs. Armstrong & Aldrin set
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the standard for political one-upsmanship by setting foot on the lunar
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surface. I'm sorry, but I was not yet five years old during the summer
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of '69 when Americans huddled before black & white Philcos and
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listened to Walter Cronkite verbalize their own sense of wonder... As
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best I can surmise, I was either digging my way underneath the
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backyard fence or blissfully sacked out atop my rubber sheet.
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However, having endured the avalanche of news coverage marking the
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event's 25th anniversary, I could surely conjure a false memory and
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join in the mass catharsis, contrived rot that it is.
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"Where were you when Apollo landed?"
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"Oh, I was still at Antioch. I remember stocking the microbus, about
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to leave for Woodstock, when Mara called me inside. We sat in front of
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the TV, ate some mushrooms and complained about Nixon... and the army.
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Then we played some Donovan and tried to agree on our mantra for the
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weekend."
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"Wow, that's great... Hey, how are things at Morgan Stanley?"
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Where were you when Bobby Kennedy was shot? You were at Monterey,
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weren't you? Remember when we got brained outside the convention in
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Chicago?
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These are questions Baby Boomers still ask each other, over and over
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again, usually at cocktail parties thrown by investment houses
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somewhere in mid-town Manhattan. The moon landing is especially good
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fodder because its foundation was laid by the oft-recalled President
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Kennedy, the single greatest beneficiary of this intense need for
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Boomers to explore their collective memory.
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The lunar expedition, or rather the 25th anniversary thereof, is
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merely the latest example the Boomers' superannuated nostalgia - made
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all the more ironic by the generation's complete disinterest in
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further space exploration. These are the people who castigated
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American capitalism, then bought Saabs and now summer in Bar Harbor;
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the people who remember the Apollo landing as a timeless example of
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American will and know-how, then pointedly ask what purpose the
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Shuttle serves.
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Despite their vast capacity for contradiction and hypocrisy, Boomers
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cling to these memories - and the ideals they once represented -
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because they can't bear to look forward.
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Boomers are obsessed with nostalgia because they're afraid to imagine
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where in hell they'll take the country next. Responsible as they are
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for the 1970s and '80s, Boomers are content - nay, obsessed with
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idealization of the '60s, that period before they fucked up the
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country and compromised everything for which they had presumably
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stood.
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The 25th anniversary of the lunar landing is just the latest in what
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has been a nauseating string of '60s pop culture memorials,
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orchestrated by Boomers now in control of the nation's media outlets.
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And they're not done yet!
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Did you enjoy Dan Rather's live report from Woodstock II? Well, get
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ready for Katie Couric on location at the Cambodian border, marking
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Nixon's clandestine bombings; Joan Lunden, a tear in her eye, wishing
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you "Good Morning" from Paris beside Jim Morrison's grave; Peter
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Jennings standing in the Rose Garden, pointing to the spot where Nixon
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waved goodbye (With all due respect to the recently aired BBC
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documentary, the U.S. retrospective will take place in 1999, the 25th
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anniversary of Watergate's unsavory resolution when Boomers finally
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ascended and their parents grudgingly stepped aside).
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Mercifully, the deluge will likely stop there because, as we've
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discussed, Boomers would sooner trade in their Dockers than relive
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post-1974 America. Too painful. Too revealing of their own hypocrisy.
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There will be no anniversary celebrations of Reagan America because
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all the ex-hippies would rather not discuss why they voted for him,
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why they worked on Wall Street, why they started acting like their
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parents had.
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Yes, by 1999, the 25-year retrospectives will give way to 30- and 35-
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year retrospectives - and to a potentially larger obsession: The
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institutional worry over their sullen, slacking children, those of us
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in Generation X.
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It's possible the Boomers are right about us. Can a generation whose
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only communal memory is the Challenger Disaster possibly carry on the
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American Dream?
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A valid question, but here's a better one: Will the Baby Boomers ever
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realize what Generation X has already grasped - namely, that Boomers
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boned and gutted the Dream long ago?
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Doubtful. Retrospection is one thing; introspection quite another.
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BOB PRYOR: SOME GUY YOU DON'T EVEN KNOW
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By MARK SULLIVAN
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It could be said that white-haired sports scribe Bob Pryor played Yoda
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to Hal Phillips during Hal's early days as sports editor at the
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Marlboro Enterprise, in the same way it could be said Dennis the
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Menace played Yoda to Mr. Wilson.
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The son of a former Ziegfield Follies Girl who was herself once
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publisher of the paper, Bob Pryor - schoolboy sports maven, golf guru
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and devotee of Marlboro tavern society - spent decades at the
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Enterprise, publishing it, editing it, then carrying on as a sports
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reporter and columnist when it passed from his family's hands to chain
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ownership.
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By the time Hal inherited him, Bob, in his early <20>60s, was a golf-
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panted, quirkily opinionated, oft-pixilated institution at the
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Enterprise: He was a fount of information about Marlboro, about the
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actual number of Hills on which the so-called Highland City was built,
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about the Marlboro mayor in the 1940s who drowned himself in Lake
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Williams, about former Red Sox player Steve Lyons' father, Itchy, from
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neighboring Hudson.
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Of convivial bent, Bob, to Hal's chagrin, would go missing one or two
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times a night, typically to Kennedy's pub across the street where, Bob
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explained, they knew how to prepare the special fish on his diet. He
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was a reigning fixture at the news staff's after-work haunt, Sully's
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First Edition Pub, where a drink was named after him - the Pryor
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Special, a zombie-size glass of straight vodka beside a tumbler of ice
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water.
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Bob favored colorful polyester pants from the links and wore his white
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hair in a spit curl that made him look, in the photo above his
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newspaper column, like a sexagenarian Kewpie doll. Extended periods of
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silence in Bob's corner of the newsroom would inevitably be broken out
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of nowhere by a Tourette-like "Yawwwp!," or a whimsical "HHmmmm!"
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As a Braintree, Mass. schoolboy playing basketball in the old Tech
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Tourney at the Boston Garden in the early 1940s, Bob recalls, he was
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described in the Globe sports-page account as "sagacious." Bob's
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sagacity extends to other areas, as well. In a recent phone interview,
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he held forth on a variety of subjects, among them:
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Woodstock II: "My opinion of Woodstock: It's a naked drunk in the
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woods. If that's what today's young people like for fun and
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recreation, I'm glad I brought my three up differently."
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The Baseball Strike: "I can say it in one word: Greed. How can you
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collect $1.2 million whether you're on the field or on the bench? On
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the road you have your meals paid for you. You get your transportation
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paid for you, your insurance paid for you, your accommodations paid
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for you. These guys are looking for more, more more... If they want to
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be self-employed, they should take up the game of golf, where if you
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don't win, you eat hot dogs."
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On the Caning of Teen Vandal Michael Fay in Singapore: "He doesn't
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need a smack on the bum - he needs psychological therapy. I don't
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think a smack on the bum is going to help this kid."
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On Worthy Candidates for Caning here in the States: "I know a lot of
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politicians who deserve it. Ted Kennedy, for one. I'd like to cane
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[House Speaker Tom] Foley. Hilary ought to get two of them: one
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tonight, another tomorrow night."
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On AIDS: "I found out today from a doctor that bleach can kill AIDS. I
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was amazed! How do you take bleach. That would clean you out!"
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On the Late Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis: "Jackie was not what everyone
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thinks she was. It was not Camelot behind the scenes.... Way back when
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Jack was running for Senator, he stopped by the old Enterprise office
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on Liberty Street. In he came with her. This was an old building, but
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we got the paper out every day. She walked in, looked around and said,
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'This is a newspaper?'
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"Jack said: 'Back in the car!'
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"That doesn't mean she was a bad lady. I think she was a spoiled
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person... When she married the Greek, was that love? That was a
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business arrangement. Her whole life was a business arrangement. She
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ran down the beach in the nude. Hey, that was her thing. I didn't
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glorify her."
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NOTES FROM THE UNDERGROUND
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BY HAL PHILLIPS
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Several sister publications have come in from the cold, that is say
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they have emerged from the murky self-publishing landscape and somehow
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landed in The Herald letter bin. Most found their way to Portland as
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result of our recent press, though one seems to suffer from a pre-
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existing condition.
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... You'll notice the good-hearted Herald staff, to this point, has
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avoided mention of imitation and its relation to flattery - to say
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nothing of plagiarism, copyright law and respect for the intrinsic
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value of intellectual property. Suffice to say, these interloping
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editors are shameless in their use of 8.5- by 11-inch paper and the
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English language, both of which are Herald trademarks... One of these
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shameless knockoffs actually had the nerve to use italics as vehicles
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for emphasis! Why, The Herald practically invented the practice!
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In any case, let us take a quick, objective look at each of these,
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these... HIJACKERS!
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<EFBFBD> "Owens: A Newsletter about Gardening and Cooking" is just that.
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||
Originating from Newton, Mass., Owens is published as an adjunct to a
|
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gardening establishment there. At eight pages, the newsletter contains
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expected features like recipes, gardening advice and listings of local
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services & catalogs. Owens is well written, informative and pretty
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clever: To sit and look at your garden with a glass of beer or iced
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tea in your hand might seem like idleness. This practice can be
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dignified by calling it "on-site planning." Unexpected and less-
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inspired are the newsletter<65>s offbeat stories. One Owen<65>s contributor
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spent four pages in painstaking character study of three women he sees
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socially. Sorta boring. Readers may remember that Owen<65>s took first
|
||
place in the Globe<62>s ranking of self-published newsletters (The Herald
|
||
finished second). Staff members here at The Herald have been outwardly
|
||
gracious about the snub. Privately, the five words most frequently
|
||
used to describe the voting process have been "fucking travesty of
|
||
justice man..."
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||
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<EFBFBD> "Epiphanies in P Major" is published out of Portland, Maine, by
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Roger Dutton, who either took too many philosophy courses at school,
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||
or not nearly enough. Lots of esoteric discussion here, under
|
||
recurring headlines like "The Self Absorptions of Salesmanship,"
|
||
"Therapy and the Pendulum," "A Reaction to Antonin Artaud" and "The
|
||
Existential i." Whoa. Heroic archetypes meticulously explored through
|
||
the writing of Campbell, Sartre and Morrison (that<61>s right, Jim)
|
||
interspersed with healthy portions of my all-time fave, poetry. It
|
||
seems as though Roger did his best to include all the things I hate
|
||
most. Not his fault really. Mine alone.
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> Adrian Praeter, one of my college roommates in London, recently
|
||
weighed in with "Adrian<61>s Oracle," published (rather crudely, I might
|
||
add) with financial assistance from fictional sponsor Jiffy Condoms,
|
||
whose motto is "Get it on in a Jiffy" - an ironic advertising
|
||
relationship considering Adrian<61>s sexual tag line, "Finished in a
|
||
Jiffy." In any case, Adrian is an actor so when he isn<73>t doing odd
|
||
jobs, he has a good deal of time on his hands. A large portion of the
|
||
publication (a.k.a. The Orifice) is dedicated to deftly taking the
|
||
piss out of me, the world of self-publishing in general, and The
|
||
Harold Herald in particular. As an Englishman - embittered by his
|
||
country<EFBFBD>s tragic plunge into oblivion - Praeter<65>s anti-American
|
||
carping is to be expected and, well, pitied. Sad really. He is,
|
||
nonetheless, quite a clever boy. For example:
|
||
|
||
An actual letter from Adrian<61>s bank manager (and the Ginger Nob<6F>s
|
||
reply - not, incidentally, "Dear Fascist Bullyboy, Give me some money
|
||
you bastard...) are set against lively faux letters, like this one:
|
||
Dear (No madame, it<69>s not a third leg) Praeter: Thought I<>d just touch
|
||
base and fill you in on the details. Well, what about old Henry huh?
|
||
You know, our old alumni... alumnut... aluunni... tit... arsehole,
|
||
arrium - sure we all know him, so everybody<64>s interested right?
|
||
|
||
Horoscopes: Virgo - Stop! Read no further. Go to your room, get back
|
||
into bed and stay there! Go now! ... Has he gone? Good.
|
||
Capricorn - Ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha... no honestly, you<6F>ll be
|
||
fine.
|
||
|
||
Advice: Dear Auntie Ada, I have recently been dumped by my boyfriend
|
||
A****N. What he doesn<73>t know is that I have a very infectious form of
|
||
genital herpes. I was going to tell him but I couldn<64>t be bothered. Do
|
||
you think I am being selfish? Yours slyly, X, London.
|
||
|
||
Ada Expostulates: Selfish? You? Nooo... You bitch! You sodding tart!
|
||
How the hell could you do such a thing to such a genuinely nice,
|
||
sincere, loving bloke?
|
||
|
||
Personal ads: Marlies and Agnetta, 21 & 22 respectively, seek slightly
|
||
older man for lessons and fun. Name must begin with "A". 071 443 5899.
|
||
|
||
International News in Brief: "Shock result in USA presidential
|
||
election. Young English actor elected on a very liberal ticket. Stand
|
||
by for further details."
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> The Highly Esteemed Howl is published by a pair of 14-year-olds who
|
||
live right here in Portland. So let me say, before I teach the little
|
||
fucks a journalism lesson they<65>ll never forget, that I am truly moved
|
||
by their literary pluck and plain ol<6F> enterprising spirit. Actually,
|
||
without the aid of desktop publishing, Eli & Eli have put together an
|
||
interesting book with good stunts, like the recently concluded "I<>m an
|
||
Infringer" contest that allowed readers to transgress copyright laws
|
||
by sending in a good newspaper comic and printing it in the Howl. Of
|
||
course, the winner chose Garfield, which is part of the problem
|
||
here... Hey! They<65>re 14! Cut <20>em some slack!
|
||
|
||
Some heavy Beatle worship on Elise<73>s Page spun off into this bit:
|
||
Woodstock <20>94: Of course, it isn<73>t going to be half as cool as the
|
||
original Woodstock, and there will probably be a lot more drugs, and
|
||
it will be violent, and, uh, well, 1994 just is not the summer of
|
||
love!" How<6F>s that for Boomer envy...Wonder where they picked that up?
|
||
"They don<6F>t learn these things on the streets..."
|
||
|
||
|
||
WHY NOT TAKE IN A MOVIE? GLAD YOU ASKED...
|
||
By DAVID M. ROSE, Ph.D.
|
||
Cinema Critic Pro Tem
|
||
|
||
I<EFBFBD>m not a big movie person; in the past year I<>ve seen two: Mrs.
|
||
Doubtfire (fluff) and David Lean<61>s Lawrence of Arabia (four-odd hours
|
||
of absolute bliss). With a record like this, I would not presume to
|
||
tell anyone which movies they should see. However, after careful
|
||
consideration of this summer<65>s offerings, I believe I am uniquely
|
||
qualified to tell you which movies NOT to see.
|
||
|
||
The Flintstones: Say what you like about Hollywood, this movie proves
|
||
its creative minds are not afraid to try new things. Imagine taking an
|
||
old television show, and making it into a movie! The casting here is
|
||
particularly impressive: the lead role of Fred Flintstone, a fat
|
||
simpleton, is played by John Goodman, who is undeniably fat and
|
||
simple. Before you go see this one, ask yourself two questions: First,
|
||
how likely is it the movie will be better than the TV show? Second,
|
||
how good was the TV show? Case closed.
|
||
|
||
The Mask: Why is Jim Carrey famous? He started out as The White guy on
|
||
In Living Color, and he was about as funny as Garrett Morris playing
|
||
The Black Guy on the first couple seasons of Saturday Night Live.
|
||
Carrey<EFBFBD>s only other credit of note: title role in Ace Ventura, Pet
|
||
Detective. No, I haven<65>t seen it, but how can a movie with this title
|
||
be good? With this resume, suddenly he<68>s a superstar, hailed as "the
|
||
new Jerry Lewis." With the exception of a few demented Frenchmen, has
|
||
anyone been clamoring for the old Jerry Lewis? Another problem with
|
||
this movie is the emphasis that has been placed on its special
|
||
effects. Lookit: Jurassic Park proved the kids at Industrial Light and
|
||
Magic, given enough cash, can do anything they want to do as far as
|
||
special effects are concerned. Now that this fact has been
|
||
established, there is no reason to be impressed by special effects.
|
||
Finally, there is already a movie called Mask, and it stars Cher and a
|
||
sort of malformed Danny Bonaduce*. I do not want to relive that
|
||
experience.
|
||
|
||
The Little Rascals: Help me, lord.
|
||
|
||
Forrest Gump: First, this movie has already been made twice before.
|
||
The first time it was called Being There, and the second time is was
|
||
called Zelig. Of course, the special effects are much more
|
||
sophisticated that those used in Zelig but, again, special effects are
|
||
just a matter of how much money you have to spend. The biggest reason
|
||
I will never see this movie is that I have seen the commercials on TV
|
||
and I cannot sit for two hours listening to Tom Hanks talk like Deputy
|
||
Dawg on Quaaludes. And I like Deputy Dawg.
|
||
|
||
The Lion King: Walt Disney is the purest manifestation of evil on this
|
||
Earth, and all Disney productions are pure shit. The most inane Warner
|
||
Bros. cartoon (probably one of the 15 billion baby kangaroo ones) is
|
||
so intellectually and artistically superior to the best Disney cartoon
|
||
it makes me positively woozy. If you have children, and if they beg
|
||
you to see this movie, give them heroin instead.
|
||
|
||
(* Eric Stoltz played this role. Cher was a biker babe who, with her
|
||
physically deformed yet incredibly well-adjusted son, traveled from
|
||
West Coast campsite to West Coast campsite with her various multiple-
|
||
tattoo boyfriends. And ya<79> know, those bikers accepted Cher<65>s bulbous-
|
||
faced son without prejudice. It was touching - Ed.)
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR
|
||
|
||
Well, thanks to the recent media firestorm, the mailbag is full
|
||
this month as never before. Interesting, though; nary a letter from
|
||
our electronic audience. Lets hear some chatter out there, people.
|
||
Letters, submissions, queries, potshots, etc. can be directed to
|
||
drose@fas.harvard.edu.
|
||
d.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
To the Editor:
|
||
|
||
Well, now that The Herald has been blazoned across the front page of
|
||
the
|
||
Portland Press-Herald, featured in the Boston Globe, and open to
|
||
anyone with Internet access, I suppose all that is left is to go the
|
||
way of Kurt Cobain, who eschewed the fame he attained. (If he hated
|
||
success so much, why did he keep performing in public? Asshole.)
|
||
|
||
Please, for the sake of your readers, assign the story of your suicide
|
||
in advance so that it will be captured in print. Should you decide to
|
||
issue press passes to the event itself, count me out. I won<6F>t be party
|
||
to these publicity stunts.
|
||
Regretfully,
|
||
Alison Harris
|
||
Cumberland, Maine
|
||
|
||
Ed. I assure you, madame, there will be no eschewing of fame from
|
||
these offices. But while I'm contemplating my own mortality, despite
|
||
your protestations, the story is yours.
|
||
|
||
Dear Mr. Phillips,
|
||
|
||
I read about you in the paper the other day, but since you obviously
|
||
have a better press agent than I do, you probably did not read about
|
||
me in the paper.
|
||
|
||
My name is Elise (not Elsie) Adams, and I am the founder of a lovely
|
||
little publication called the Highly Esteemed Howl. I have been doing
|
||
the paper for a little over a year, and have 100 less subscribers (or
|
||
whatever you wish to call them) than you do, but hey, I try.
|
||
|
||
I enclosed the latest issue of the Howl (August issue) . I hope you
|
||
enjoy it. Made by a couple of 14-year-olds, its the best issue in a
|
||
while (doing a magazine during an attack of mood swings is not
|
||
advisable). I admit that two entire pages for Eli & Eli is a bit much
|
||
for them, but Sage backed out of his astrology forecast at the last
|
||
minute.
|
||
|
||
I was hoping, if you readily agree of course, that perhaps we could
|
||
trade - one year of the Howl for you and six months of the Harold
|
||
Herald for me? (The HH is two pages longer than the average Howl).
|
||
|
||
Don<EFBFBD>t worry about paying for the Howl. Since the Herald is free, The
|
||
Howl will be, too. After all this is a trade. The reason that the Howl
|
||
needs to be paid for by everyone except those named Harold, is the
|
||
fact that I<>m 14, do not have a job, and somebody has to pay for the
|
||
stamps.
|
||
|
||
Elise Adams
|
||
Howl founder, editor,
|
||
writer, distributor, publisher
|
||
Portland, Maine
|
||
|
||
Ed. Kid, you got yourself a deal. Actually, the Howl is well ahead of
|
||
the Herald in some aspects of the printing process, namely, using both
|
||
sides of the paper.
|
||
|
||
Dear Mr. Phillips,
|
||
|
||
While in Maine last month on a three-week New England vacation, I was
|
||
fortunate enough to read the news story in the daily newspaper
|
||
[Portland Press-Herald] about your individual newspaper. I was
|
||
captivated because it was very nearly the same thing I had done last
|
||
year after a two-week writing workshop at Bennington College. There
|
||
were a dozen of us at Bennington studying non-fiction writing under
|
||
Sven Birkerts, a published essayist and English professor. We
|
||
established such a bond that we attempted to keep together through a
|
||
newsletter, which I undertook to edit. The idea was they would write
|
||
me and I, in turn, would edit their news for the whole group. To prime
|
||
the pump, I started putting out a weekly newsletter about what I was
|
||
doing. Sven commented that I had the best documented life since Samuel
|
||
Johnson.
|
||
|
||
Letters from the others dwindled, and although it was tremendous fun
|
||
writing it, I finally reached the realization that nobody out there
|
||
was listening to what I was saying. I<>m afraid the paid subscription
|
||
does more than pay for postage and printing; it is a vote of
|
||
confidence and interest. I suspended publication.
|
||
|
||
I would greatly appreciate receiving a copy of The Harold Herald. If
|
||
you have discovered the secret of writing non-fiction that sustains
|
||
interest week after week or month after month, I need to learn from
|
||
you.
|
||
Wayne Boyce, editor
|
||
The Stream of History
|
||
Newport, Ark.
|
||
Ed. I don't yet charge for subscriptions, so what you can learn from
|
||
me remains to be seen. The secret to sustaining interest with non-
|
||
fiction, it seems to me, is the secret of newspaper column writing.
|
||
And the secret to column writing, as I see it, is not giving a
|
||
tinker<EFBFBD>s cuss what people do with their votes of confidence. Not
|
||
giving a shit makes it easier to grab a reader by the throat. Until
|
||
that happens, send it to them whether they want it or not. There -
|
||
take that to your writer<65>s workshop and discuss it.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Dear Harold,
|
||
Could you enroll me as a subscriber? My qualifications: I am a
|
||
Wesleyan grad (<28>63); I have one foot in Maine (Wiscasset home); I am
|
||
opinionated in weird ways - for example, I am a strong proponent of
|
||
television violence. Hard to beat that.
|
||
Further qualification: I will pay money. How much?
|
||
Jib Fowles, Ph.D
|
||
professor, media studies
|
||
University of Houston
|
||
|
||
Ed. Whoa, media studies. They don't teach that at Wesleyan, my fine
|
||
friend. Good thing you're employed by an institution unhindered by the
|
||
principles of liberal arts education. But Dr. Fowles is okay. He sent
|
||
me a buck. On our scale, that<61>s worth a lifetime membership.
|
||
|
||
|
||
By HAL PHILLIPS
|
||
|
||
NANTUCKET, Mass. - The splendid Messinger residence here in sparsely
|
||
populated Madaket, wedged in the island's southeast corner, features a
|
||
stupendous porch that nearly encircles the shingled, two story
|
||
structure.
|
||
|
||
Just beyond an open field teaming with stands of love grass, the ocean
|
||
can be seen - and heard. With nothing to quell its momentum between
|
||
here and Bermuda, the heaving Atlantic slaps the sandy shoreline,
|
||
providing porchsitters a continuous, briny overture of cacophonous but
|
||
nevertheless soothing tones.
|
||
|
||
Hidden from the revelers - around one corner of the porch - lay would-
|
||
be groom Tim Dibble, his soft groans drowned out by the crashing surf.
|
||
For two days he gamely indulged himself and friends by downing
|
||
repeated libations and deflecting other drinking schemes with
|
||
customary <20>lan.
|
||
|
||
Dibble had escaped Night I of this bachelor weekend (July 22-23), but
|
||
his luck ran out at 11:34 p.m. on Night II.
|
||
|
||
After much prodding from yours truly, Dibble finally listened to the
|
||
better angels of his nature before spewing them over porch's edge.
|
||
Three feet from his preferred spot of expectoration, Dibble gracefully
|
||
laid himself down, his nose and forehead there to break the fall.
|
||
Catatonic, his now-fetal form lay half on the porch, half inside.
|
||
|
||
As Dibble would have wished, guests resumed the business of partying,
|
||
periodically checking on their fallen hero to make sure he was
|
||
breathing. "Trap-her" John McIntyre, M.D. returned from one visit and
|
||
assured those gathered that Dibble's listless demeanor was nothing to
|
||
worry about.
|
||
|
||
"His rectal tone is normal," said the good doctor.
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD><EFBFBD><EFBFBD>
|
||
|
||
The end, for Dibble, was swift if not painless. He was in fine spirits
|
||
at 11 p.m. that Saturday night, despite having absorbed numerous shots
|
||
of tequila, several bong hits and a lobster/clam dinner. He appeared
|
||
capable of riding out the evening sur porch, yukking it up with his
|
||
substantial coterie of friends.
|
||
|
||
But fate and friendship intervened. Ringleader Allan Jones soon
|
||
proposed a pair of cement mixers (shots of different liquors, poured
|
||
independently and held in one's mouth, shaken about, then swallowed)
|
||
for Tim Dibble and Ben Taylor. Herr Dibble responded well, as did the
|
||
Mount Desert Islander Taylor.
|
||
|
||
But just then, fellow MDI native and Wesleyan grad David MacDonald
|
||
took the opportunity to make a touching, albeit devastating gesture:
|
||
Single-malt scotch whiskey and tacky Maine crafts!
|
||
|
||
By Jupiter, a truly devilish combination!
|
||
|
||
Mac first presented the fast-fading groom-to-be a hologram picture of
|
||
a clipper ship in choppy seas, explaining how it symbolized the young
|
||
Dibble before he agreed to marry. Mesmerized by the ever-shifting
|
||
waves, Dibble hunched ever so slightly and began to breath heavily.
|
||
|
||
"Bad timing," Dibble muttered under his breath.
|
||
|
||
Next MacDonald presented Dibble a picture of two cuddly kittens
|
||
painted on a piece of wood, symbolizing the serene union of Tim and
|
||
his betrothed, Maureen Holland. Despite the manly nature of those in
|
||
attendance many a tear was shed, so cute were the wood-bound kittens.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, Dibble's head was now in his hands and would remain
|
||
there for the duration of his waking evening, which is to say, about
|
||
10 minutes.
|
||
|
||
MacDonald repeatedly offered the would-be groom a shot of single-malt.
|
||
Rudely, I thought, Dibble refused. The bride's brother then invited
|
||
Dibble to perform with him three-way cement mixer consisting of
|
||
scotch, tequila and clam juice left over from dinner. Wisely, I
|
||
thought (considering the clam juice), Dibble refused.
|
||
|
||
Besides, the end was only moments away.
|
||
|
||
MORE DIBBLE
|
||
By HAL PHILLIPS
|
||
|
||
NANTUCKET, Mass. - An event on the order of Tim Dibble's bachelor
|
||
party should be accorded what we in the trade call a "sidebar," a
|
||
piddling little complementary story that runs alongside a story of
|
||
great magnitude. If Dibble blows chow, it's automatically a story of
|
||
great magnitude. Hence, the need for a piddling story like the one
|
||
printed below, which runs through the moments of hilarity that
|
||
couldn't be addressed in the bigger, more important Dibble story that
|
||
appears elsewhere in this month's Herald.
|
||
|
||
In any case:
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> This was a first-class bachelor party all the way. No fat strippers
|
||
jumping out of cakes; no raunchy films; no greasing the groom-to-be
|
||
with gobs of vegetable shortening and mounting him from... Like I
|
||
said, real classy.
|
||
|
||
Beautiful seaside location. Catered meals. Even a chartered boat for
|
||
the ride from Hyannis to Nantucket. Having flown from Portland, I did
|
||
not experience the excursion. But it was reported that Dibble only
|
||
bared his buttocks to passing boats on two occasions. And Joe Novicki
|
||
only once!
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> Pretty much everyone arrived at the Messinger household Friday
|
||
night, and drinking began immediately. At about 1 a.m., a crowd of 10-
|
||
15 walked three minutes to the beach where we played some beach soccer
|
||
under an incredibly bright, full moon. Sometime during the game,
|
||
Dibble and Ben Taylor rankled each other - in a nice way, of course.
|
||
The groom-to-be responded by clubbing an unsuspecting Ben over the
|
||
head with an enormous beach toy resembling a Hippity-Hop - only
|
||
bigger. While surf rolled his limp body back and forth in the surf,
|
||
Ben somehow lost his shoes. When he regained consciousness, Ben
|
||
rejoined the game and laid on Dibble one of the nastiest tackles in
|
||
the long history of MBSWNG (Moonlit Beach Soccer With No Goals). The
|
||
next day, Ben remembered nothing of either incident. His shoes were
|
||
never recovered.
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> For a brief five-minute period on Friday night, ringleader Allan
|
||
Jones dubbed Paul Buckovitch the "Faux Dibble," and convinced poor
|
||
Paul - with the aid of 30 excitable boys singing the "Ole" song - to
|
||
consume three consecutive tequila shots when everyone, in fact,
|
||
expected Dibble to do the shots. Brilliant! Jones should be commended
|
||
at this time for... oh, why bother.
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> Jammin' Jim Jackson picked me up at the airport and shared a few
|
||
libations with me at the Rose & Crown, a bar where Jammin' used to
|
||
work during college. After their chartered boat had docked, Dibble or
|
||
Jones were scheduled to stop by the Rose & Crown, pick me up and take
|
||
me to Madaket. After considerable delay, Jones shows up with Dibble,
|
||
who was sporting a bowling ball chained to his ankle (no kidding) and
|
||
a T-shirt that read: "Dip me in honey and feed me to the lesbians"
|
||
[Ed. At this time, the staff would like to apologize to all Herald
|
||
readers who happen to be lesbians or bowling enthusiasts. We also
|
||
apologize to people who might know lesbians personally and consider
|
||
them friends. However, apologies to lesbians who bowl - especially
|
||
candlepin - are withheld. That just isn't natural!]
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> All weekend, Jones, Novicki, John Cullinane and Dibble took turns
|
||
crapping on each other's girlfriends. Dibble carried the day with
|
||
ease, however, slamming Jones and his significant other, Maria, who is
|
||
actually beyond reproach. While discussing why the Knicks had lost the
|
||
NBA title to the Rockets, Dibble explained: "The Knicks would have won
|
||
if Maria hadn't kept Oakley up all night before Game 7."
|
||
|
||
<EFBFBD> In a quiet moment, Marc Brown and I agreed that, when it came to
|
||
figures from popular culture, Dibble most resembled Sherman from the
|
||
"Sherman and Peabody" cartoons on Bullwinkle. As it happened, I had a
|
||
Sherman and Peabody T-shirt with me for the weekend... Trippy.
|
||
|
||
|
||
OBITUARIES
|
||
|
||
Lily Vandermay, 1993-1994
|
||
|
||
Portland, ME - Lily Vandermay, a border collie/spaniel mix who
|
||
liked to chew things up and play on the beach, was hit by a car the
|
||
first week in August.
|
||
|
||
While walking through Deering Oaks Park here, Ms. Lilly bolted after a
|
||
squirrel and into the busy road. The end was quick and, the
|
||
veterinarian insisted, Ms. Lilly did not suffer.
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She was one and a half.
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It is with great sadness that we report to Herald readers the untimely
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death of Lilly the Dog, who was first spotted by Sharon Vandermay at a
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Brunswick animal shelter in May 1993. Legend tells us that Ms. Lilly
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licked Vandermay's hands and promptly rolled over, looking for a rub
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on the stomach. This would become her trademark.
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Like most dogs, Ms. Lilly was not the brightest bulb in the box.
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Indeed, one of Vandermay's gentlemen callers affectionately called her
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"Posty" (as in "dumb as a post") and "Flea bag" (for no particular
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||
reason). Yet, even this cat lover was eventually won over by Ms.
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Lilly's good nature and obvious affection for Ms. Vandermay.
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Ms. Lilly leaves her mom, Ms. Vandermay; her aunt, Cathy Vlietstra;
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and hundreds of colleagues in Portland's dog subculture who continue
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to roam East End Beach, the West End Cemetery, and Deering Oaks. In
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lieu of flowers, memorial contributions can be made to the animal
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shelter of your choice.
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(copyright 1994 the harold herald all rights
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reserved for what it's worth)
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