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A PAIR TRADE-IN
TOWARDS THE PURCHASE
OF A NEW PAIR!
COME DICKER WITH “TRADER DON”!
Each yaar many paopla ask ma what they should do with
their old ski equipment This year my answer is our huge
Trade-In Sale' I will guarantee you $25 00 or more trade-in
value on your old downhill skis or boots So don’t throw it out
bring it in'
YOUR USED DOWNHILL SKIS OR BOOTS
ARE WORTH AT LEAST
CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS Monday-Saturday
9 a.m.-9 p.m., Sunday 12-5 p.m.
Reprints
Continued from Page 13B
Oliphant's cartoons? His name
is Punk, and he's the star of the
campaign He appears on t
shirts, posters and his own
stuffed doll
"Ban This Book” contains
cartoons from this past year,
featuring the big enemies
James Watt, Ronald Reagan
and The Bomb Oliphant's
humor is as crisp and sharp as
his drawing He deserves the
hype
An earlier darling has also
been anthologized Jules
Felffer's America (Knopf.
$12 95) is a best of cartoons
from Eisenhower to Reagan
Feiffer is an American institu
tion His multi-panel drawings
have been appearing since the
50s Few professors do not have
at least one Feiffer tacked up on
their bulletin boards or their
doors
Another anthology is College
Humor, edited by Don Carlinsky
(Harper and Row, paper, $9.95).
This collection spans more than
100 years of campus funnies,
including parody, satire, jokes
and cartoons. The first flower
ing (or in some cases deflower
ing) of some of America's finest
humorists is reproduced here
Quite interestingly, the col
lection was done with style and
reverence There is a definite
place in American culture for
campus humor
Several prominant journalists
have been collected this year
too
Investigative reporter James
Phelan has published Scandals,
Scamps and Scoundrels (Ran
dom House, $13 95). The col
lected stories feature the likes of
the Clifford Irving hoax, Jim
Garrison vs. Clay Shaw and re
clusive Howard Hughes.
The Red Smith Reader (Ran
dom House, $15 95) contains
Smith's own choices for the
best of this venerable sports
writer's columns from the 40s to
the present Sports fans, jour
nalists and all lovers of fine
prose will enjoy the work of this
writer who is as colorful as iiis
subjects
While not a journalist, Fran
Liebowitz, is the consummate
New Yorker And she is out
again in Social Studies (Pocket
Books, paper. $3 25) Liebowitz.
for whom roughing it might
mean unfiltered cigarettes,
once again takes on people,
places, thinqs and ideas
"Don't bother discussing sex
with small children." she ad
vises "They rarely have anyth
ing to add "
To teenagers she says,
"Stand firm In your refusal to
remain conscious during alge
bra In real life, there is no such
thing as algebra "
To parents she notes, "Do
not, on a rainy day ask your
child what he feels like doing,
because I assure you, what he
feels like doing, you won't feel
like watching "
Paul Dickson has compiled
Words (Delacorte Press,
$13 95) From the author of
"Toasts" we've been given lists
of words for all occasions
These might be a complete al
phabet of words to describe be
ing drunk, or just the right word
for the perfect moments Se
rious writers may find "Words"
as necessary as Roget The rest
of us ordinary mortals may find it
humorous, interesting and
highly entertaining
The big seller this year just
may be The World of Dark
Crystal (Knopf, $14 95). This
large-format book written by
J.J Llewellyn and illustrated by
Brian Froud is the complete de
scription/explanation of the
soon to be released film
The movie is expected to be a
big hit. Much of the work behind
it came from Muppet creator Jim
Henson. "Dark Crystal" should
draw the audience from the
recent successful space
movies, fantasy freaks and chil
dren growing up
What would I982 be without a
video games book? This year try
Defending the Galaxy edited by
Michael Rubin (Triad Publish
ing). This irreverent, tongue-in
cheek collection pokes fun at
our video culture and answers
such important questions as
proper video etiquette
The choice of new fiction is
very difficult However. Mean
Time, a first novel by Chris
topher Leland (Random House,
$12 95) may find a place on
vacation reading lists
"Mean Time" is a tough look
at passion, violence and lives
with little else to do but burn
away inside It's a raw exposure
to the existence of Americans
whose lives are so without
meaning they go from one
emotional crisis to the next in
order to fill out their tawdry time
on earth
It's a hard look at a hard life
Finally one book not to look
at Real Men Don't Cook
Quiche, (Pocket Books. $3 95)
The real man idea was cute,
and not without a small amount
of merit, if only to poke tun at
our rapidly-evolving androgeny
But this book, which tries to
answer the question of what real
men eat is just plain tacky
The writing is cloying, the
jokes innane and the subject
trite The basic premise, that
man was born to barbeque, has
been gone over many times
before, and done much, much
better
Give a HOME FABRICS GIFT
CERTIFICATE For Christmas
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51 'fwfiiw* •'/*
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