Page Four, THE HILLTOP, February 18,1977 Books in Review* ‘Rice Paddy Debates,’ Sid Finister Offer Unusual Reading in ‘Class’ by JOY BRIDGES What Really Happened to the Class of ’65? by Michael Medvel and David Waliechinsky In 1965, Time magazine did a story on the graduating seniors of Palesades High School in Los Angeles. The class was selected as an example of American youth with a golden future. The children of affluence were supposed to have the best of everything. At the time, no one could have imagined the upheavals in the lives of the students of that school, and in the rest of the United States. Ten years after this Time story, Michael Medved and David Waliechinsky interviewed thirty members of that same class, and sought to find out what had happened tothem and howthey had changed. There were a lot of surprises; the quarterback of the football team had become a Hollywood masseur; the high school gang leader had built a million-dollar cloth ing business: the head cheerleader had become a profes sor of women’s studies at a college; the intellectual had become a John Bircher who had run for Congress; and, the handsome boy who had been voted “most popular” had committed suicide. The authors used oral history techniques to get a feel for the way these people were, the way they were seen Pauline Pratt Death Strikes at Magnolia Hill In Our Last Episode: When last we left the residents of Magnolia Hill, Stella and bridal company were at mid-altar, her potted poin- settia swaying in the breeze. However, attention was not focused on the nuptuals but rather on a figure in the back of the church who had interrupted the ceremony. The man’s revelations not only threw the services into a frenzy but completely changed Stella’s life. The man: Harold Finkk. His story was one of unrequited passion told to a captive Free Will Pentecostal Orthodox Church audience. He told of his adolescently-awkward love af fair with the former Pauline Grunch (now Pauline Pratt); "Pauline was the most beautiful wo—man I ever laid eyes on. Why, when she used to come over to Daddy’s feed store after school, we'd have the best time drinking our orange pop and playing footsies in the peanut pile. (As you will undoubtably recall, Harold’s father was owner of Finkk’s Feed Store, Inc.) It was always Pauline's toes that overheated my engine. But one passionate moment behind the No-Grow Weed, Ant, and Praying Mantis killer display, our toes interlocked, and so did our hearts. I didn’t see Pauline for nigh-on nine months, until one day she dropped by the store with a little goober in her arms. Why, it was the ugliest little thing I'd ever seen: Stringy hair. Inch-thick glasses, big lips, with a Magnolia Hill College tee-shirt reading “Blossoms or bust!" on the front, on. Yet I fell in love with that young-un. And I have continued to love you, Stella, and I can’t let you go through with this weeding not ever knowing the truth. You see, Stella, I am your father, not Barney." A gasp spread throughout the church as this long hid den secret was revealed. Bobby huddled in a corner moaned: "No one will come to the reception now. What ever will we do with five gross of petit fours?” Almost at the same time. Flora Lou Belle shouted: "I knew it from the very beginning. Both Pauline and Stella take a second rinse to get all of the shampoo out." From the far side of the church, a different reaction to the news was taking place. Bombarded by this string of shocking revelations, P. Dexter’s heart just couldn’t take anymore. However, all eyes were focused on the back of the church so no one noticed P. Dexter’s struggle to palpitate. The reaction of Pauline, though, was the most vivid of all. Rising to the occasion, she flung open her bulging pocketbook stuffed with imported Dreama Creama Cream puffs and began hurling them at the accusing onlookers. "Wipe that holier-than-thou look off your face, you nasty Namibian coastal shrimp," Pauline was heard to say to one of the be-tuxed pygmies. And, to Bertha Bartalski, by others, and the way they had changed into what they were today. They interviewed members of the class; each person talked about themselves and also gave their opinions about the people with whom they had gone to school. One of the most interesting studies was that of one of the authors, Michael Medved. In high school, Michael was famous for the “Great Rice Paddy Debate.” He took the position that the football field should be planted with rice. Football, he felt, costs the student body money, whereas a rice paddy would earn money for the benefit of all the students. After high school, he attended college at Yale. He graduated from that university with honors, and then proceeded to work as a speechwriter and con sultant. Medved was in the crowd at the Ambassador Ho tel when Bobby Kennedy was shot. This trauma commit ted him to literal politics, and he worked on many dif ferent campaigns. When he tired of politics, he went back to his literary interests. He began to read a great deal about Judaism in the meantime. His parents were Jewish, but they thought of themselves as “free-thinkers.” He taught in a Jewish parochial school in order to avoid the draft. Ali this exposure to the values and practices of his Jewish forefathers impressed him and became a large part of him. He married a Jewish girl and for him, the last ten years were a journey back to his roots. Consequently, he (parliamentarian of the Magnolia Hill Missionary Society and president of the local ‘Search for Yesterday’ fan club), Pauline shrieked: “Don’t look at me like that, you self- righteous bag and local missionary fund embezzler. ” Admist all the furor, Harold continued his saga: “You see, Stella, I couldn’t claim you because no future feed store magnate could possibly maintain the respect of the community, much less his peanut peddling license, under the shadow of such a scandal as this would have caused. So, one night while driving to New Rurubomba to the drive-in, we passed through Magnolia Hill. Your mother, well, she just couldn’t wait any longer, so we stopped off at one of the buildings on campus for her to tinkly-wink. She was so relieved . . . to find the perfect surroundings for her daughter’s upbringing, that she decided to leave you in the lavatory. We both knew you would get the best of care, what with quality Charmin in such abundance in the bathroom.” At that moment, Barney broke into tumultuous tears, recalling the night, long ago, when he had discovered Stella wrapped in layers of kush (alias tissue), and cry ing in the basement lavatory. At the sight of Barney’s tears. Stella, who had been languishing over the story came to believe that in a rootless generation, this wastfi® greatest gift he could have received from life. Dave Waliechinsky, the other co-author, was known 8® David Wallace in high school. He was the son of nov®!' ists Sylvia and Irving Wallace. At Palesades High, he wa® the classic underachiever, known mainly for playing cards and shooting pool. He won four hundred dollars playinS poker during school hours alone. With a great deal of creativity, Dave made up a tional student named Sid Finister and enrolied him in se'|' eral classes. Dave and his friends look tests for him, an° answered the roll call for him also. In later years, a nuir'" ber of people took out a telephone in Sid’s name. Lin' fortunately, Sid never paid his phone bills, so he ran a' foul with the telephone company. After graduation, David drifted and became involved in the hippie movement which had geared up in the eanr 1960’s. He took mescaline and had strange reactions'® it. Under its influence, he felt a great deal of respect f®' Lyndon Johnson. This fact alone made him fear for I''® sanity. Asa consequence, Dave drifted, getting involva®' to one degree or another, with most of the experienc®’ in the 1960’s. Finally, he settled into writing as a ®®' reer. In addition to What Really Happened to the of'65?, he also co-authored The People’s Almanac. , After writing What Really Happened to the Class ® '65?, the authors arranged a ten-year reunion for the cla®®. It was a great success and many in the class were able' come. One of the most gratifying results of the reunio®' however, was the realization that most of the were much more accepting of the differences in than they had been in high school. Maturity had gi"®( them more self-confidence, and the security to accsP differing views of her rejection, fainted. As all of the wedding g"®®'! gathered around Stella to revive her, Barney recogni^® that P. Dexter had taken what would be his final tumW®; Once Stella was revived, she was immediately confi'®®, ed with the even more devastating fact of P. Dext®' sudden demise. , ‘ In a maniacal frenzy, she dashed out of the church. backto home and hearth in the basement bathroom i®'’ y Administration Building where she had spent many i moments as a child. With both guilt and humilia'g,], weighing heavy upon her, a distraught Stella i her future admist Charmin and liquid plummer, l®®'^'(j/' Mike Machonelli weeping uncontrolably in the arm® ■ or bosom of a Namibian coastal shrimp, (alias pyg"®'®'' What future plans does Stella ponder? Will Pauline now change her name back to Grunch? How many rinses will It take Flora Lou to get the cre^^' \ puffs out of her hair? Find out the answers to these and other important tions as you continue to follow the newspaper ser'® Pauline Pratt, Pauline Pratt. mrs Watson Reveals Holmes’ Secret Addiction in ‘Solution’ by JONATHAN RIDDLE NBC’s Gene Shalit called it “one hundred per-cent entertainment”, and after seeing The Seven-Per-Cent So lution, one cannot help but agree. Based on the best selling novel by the same name, the film combines humor, psychology, and adventure to both dazzle the eye and tan talize the mind. Because of its practically flawless quality, The-Seven-Per-Cent Solution smells of a classic. All too often when books are made into movies they lose something in the transition. This cannot be said of The-Seven-Per-Cent Solution, for the movie truly captures the feeling of Nicholas Meyer’s book. (Perhaps Meyer’s writing of the screenplay helped.) Set up as the memoirs of John H. Watson as edited by Nicholas Meyer, the book is a narrative of Watson’s attempts to cure his pro tege Sherlock Holmes’ addition to cocaine, (who took a seven per-cent solution of the drug every day). The whole affair is based upon Meyer’s contention that Watson had covered up this very sordid episode in Holmes’ life and that Meyer had discovered the truth in Watson’s iost mem oirs, (“only the facts are made up”, of course). At any rate, Watson gets Holmes to dash off to Vienna by trick ing him into thinking his arch-enemy Professor Moriarity has left for the continent. Little does Holmes know that he is going to see Sigmund Freud who has agreed to help him through withdrawal. The fun really starts when these two meet. Obviously the story of The Seven-Per-Cent itself would be enough to entertain. But the a®* J themselves are what make the story come alive ^ Kp there is hardly a weak actor in the cast. Nicol Willi®''' as Holmes, Robert Duvall as Watson, and Alan Ark'® ^ Freud are absolutely scintillating. Neither one of 'b, |( really stands apart from the rest, (though each need be), but rather they act as a team; just as the ^ acters they portray, each learns something from the o" Vanessa Redgrave as Lola Devereaux reflects all the j and quiet grace of the character she portrays, wbil® supporting cast with such standouts as Sir Laurence O' ier, Joel Grey, and Samantha Eggar, contributes imr"® urablytothewholeflavorofthefilm. Production and direction are also excellent. Sets ® costumes of the period, camera angles and special (especially in Holmes’ withdrawal from addiction), ®b s immense technical talent and imagination. Certain sce are especially memorable — Holmes childhood expeh® the ride on the “Orient Express”, the concluding sc®''® gfi the Danube. The music is also rather effective, overpowering at times. Some would say it is matic, particularly near the beginning, but in this v"''gd' opinion it seems to add to the feeling of suspense venture that is so dominant throughout the movie. ' jt Seven-Per-Cent Solution is, therefore, one of the films of the season. In a year where mediocrity is the" , it is refreshinqly unique and entertaining.