OCR Text |
Show July 21, 1967 COLLEGIATE WEEKLY College Stu Classify ' " Page 7 nfs, rleiy iff erary Ctiiics w ible" American Movels i J 7 If you ne ed sanaals, Mu wneeiwrigni ui ine juhuuici y -n v.. an orig nal pair designed especially for you this summer. "Sandalery" Summer Discovery 2: A Sandalery Shop. During our first issue, "Collegiate Weekly" more or less gave itself an extended pat on the back for being industrious and enterprising - - and subtly suggested that we were the only ones who were doing it. We were wrong. First we discovered "Miller's Cycle Haus", now we find that a new sandal shop has opened in the same area - - 24th Street and Kie-sel Avenue - - to our delight and surprise. It's a small wonderfully crowded shop full of leather, fur, sandpaper, with sheets of stiff, white paper where the owners --Stuart Wheelwright and Karan Hunter, measure your feet with a think black crayon. Sandals hang by pieces of leather from the walls and you can sit and watch while your sandals are cut, sewn and slipped on your feet. You can pick a pattern you like-or have Stu or Karen design a pair for you - - then snip-snip and stitch - - and you have your own pair of sandals. We observed not only the excellent craftsmanship of the materials, but the durability of them - - much more long wearing than commercialized models which inevitably fall apart at the seams. Stu and Karen also designed a number of moccasins for the "Pi IXAAA'GtfVi .'. ,brMimm. . ::::::::::::::::::::::::: . :: :::-vr:::::r. A PnJnWW : r r r r l BOX OFFICE k p- p- p- W - - BOX OFFICE . fx : I a " ! PS tjorth SHDUSK sk- . mtjertn k i -4LkI ! i iTrn screen p,.... Sen' iN: WEEKDAYS & SUNDAYS . 3. ' 'L.,i1 $ ? f ' ' ' 7&&h-JUbi& ' ClV , Saturdays : AtA: "l K i E2Uifib : ,1 F . . v u 4 I P t " VfjM IAN FLEMINGS Steffi-. : ? : ' 394-609, j M:1tfSrF Jl 8 I I 2426 GRANT AVE. M9. LZZW Co - Feature - JiHf TWICE" l'S the Oflfy W3y til Uve! eLl. ' 1- -J-i " Co - Feature RED TOMAHAWK TECHNICOLOR HOW TO SUCCEED IN BUSINESS without really trying r t I f EX. I SI Shop Opens oneer Days" celebration - - and mucklucks for skiers - - and they're almost convinced by Alan to start a line of biking shoes. It seems that customers across the street have found that tennis and saddle shoes get pretty torn up on long bike rides - - and need shoes that are extra-durable. If you haven't been to the Cycle Shop yet - - or ordered a pair of sandals from the Sandalery-- both come highly recommended. hhmhm 1 It has to do with fLOWERS M I Center for 60 Years. I ' FOR THE YOUNG I PHnMF oQO -jtoi I feAx 1 PHONE399-3791 SU O SWIMMING AT HEART wagawwiwwuiMJuiJWwiMWi 1 hrA r SNACK BAR jfCftx o ( o " I f 7 O CAMPING & MftvsixNY Ouys & Gals o. Y..y n..t.r Wv) ! 3 )y PICNIC GROUNDS o Have the right summer look kl hSfJ 'i I W So-Side of Pineview Dam - Phone 745-9313 Jjjjjj o Come in to o W MARK i JOE'S I : : j IHAIR STYLING SHOhi ' 'J?Jkzt3 2aa "i fi r r i i. i 3ft 1 Pnftnrcrn Auonne i 'was Hemingway a good author?" And the answer is "No" by many young people today who feel that Ernest Hemingway is "nothing more than an appendix to the biography of Scott Fitzgerald and a footnote to "Gertrude Stein." First Music Session Ends The first session of the Weber State College Summer Music Festival will end Friday for some 250 choral and orchestra students. Lunceer C. Smith, WSC choral director, said the students have been studying music and voice techniques in a series of music seminars. Paul Christiansen, choral director from Moorhead, Minnesota was one of the session instructors, Smith said. Other instructors included Smith, Loren Crawford and Ron Wooden, WeberStateCollege;Dan-iel Lewis, University of California at San Diego; and Larry Bird Skyline High School, Salt Lake City. A second session for band students will be held August 7 - 18. The question is asked, Guitars & Amplifiers - Gibson Drums - Ludwig-Sonor Pianos - Chickering-Fischer Organs - Hammond-Everett Sheet Music - Every need fulfilled If it has to do with music Hemingway is not the only author under the line of fire from college students and graduates who claim they are "past the gloss and into the meat of American literary workds." "Faulkner was nothing more than a vain and humorless purveyor of turgid Southern tosh," claims one youthful critic. "He's a Tennesee Williams minus the poetry, a pseudo-intellectualized Erskine Caldwell. Taking the cue from three literary critics in London, England, the following are some works which the critics - - and college students feel they, and the world can do without: John Bunyan's "Pilgrim's Progress," Daniel Defoe's "Moll Flanders," Henry Fielding's "Tom Jones," Gray's "Elegy," Goldsmithjs "She Stoops To Conquer," De Quincey's "The Confessions of an English Opium Eater." Hawthorne's "The Scarlet Let MOLII DAY RESORT Girls Swim Free Friday night after 6:00 when you present this ad at the door. 1 2 price for girls with escort and in groups of 15 or more. Pleasant View - 782-9900 ter," Oliver Wendell Holmes' "The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table," Charles Dickens' "Pickwick Papers," Charlotte Bronte's "Jane Eyre," Emily Bronte's "Wuthering Heights," Herman Melville's "Moby Dick", Walt Whitman's "Leaves of Grass." Lewis Carroll's "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," Mark Twain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," A. E. Housman's "Collected Poems." J. M. Barrie's "Peter Pan," Galsworthy's "The Forsyte Saga," Norman Douglas' "South Wind," W. Somerset Maugham's "The Moon and Sixpence," Virginia Woolf's "To the Light-house," D. H. Lawrence's "Lady Chatterley's Lover," Rupert Brooke's "1914 Sonnets." t T.S. Eliot "The Waste Land" Aldous Huxley's "Point Counter Point," Faulkerner's "The Sound and the Fury," and Hemingway's "A Farewell to Arms' Pineview Vista Park & Cafe |