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About Brookings-Harbor pilot. (Brookings, Curry County, Oregon) 1946-1978 | View Entire Issue (June 2, 1955)
BROOKINGS-HARBOR PILOT - Thurstla BROOK ISG S. OREGON i » Page 2 _ N ^ d epen dent „.alter A Catered o >econd-cU«. patter M arch T. IV*«- ¡The SKETCHBOOK n ew spaper a t the poatoiftce at Er<-»kinK« ' - Oregon. the Act of M ar R jv I’isarck, Joe Murphy Editor* and Publisher* h! ASCRIPTION S3 «W >3 4» One Y ear in Advance On Curry Conty» . One Year in Advance (outaide C urry County» ,<Z^ N t WS PAP I I j has the remarkable N ew Parker development you've heard about RATES: a u o u ai L PUBLISHERS ^A S S O C IA T IO N ------ national J —— T overtisino r epresen ta tiv e by W eekly N ew spapers R epresentatives , I n c . New York Chleego s tro ll H u d PiAoAek P b.ladelphia An Important Position Is Open e • • • We need gtxwl people on the sehool lx Mid a basic fact — and this year we have an opjxirtunity to select one of them. The schools arc strictly a local affair. 'They are not run from Washington DC. or a regional headquarters in some western city, hut by us, the men and women we elect to do the job. ’Ihe great trouble with us is that we forget this birthright often, and fail to take an active inter est in school affairs with an eye towards making the schools an intergrated part of the community. T<x> often school affairs are regarded with tremendous apathy. It is up to all of us to find exceptional cand idates for the school board vacancy now open, as the date of the election approaches, and then to take a con structive interest in school work after lie is elected. The Bnxikings 1 larbor School Board consists of five directors. This year one new' director will lie- elected for a five yeai term to succeed Virgil Gold- Ix-rry, incumbent, who is not a candid.ite for re-election. The election will lx? held on June 20. The name of any qualified elector can lie placed on the ballet as a candidate by filing with the District Clerk one week before the election a nominating petition signed by not less than io qualified voters. The nominee in turn must file an acceptance of nomination five days Ix-fore the election. ART W ell, a n o th e r A zalea E«*stival 1 has “blown out ,0 the pas, Many of th e hard w orking joopl«- of the show should !»«• com plim enh'd very highly.. * * * * * Of course, along w ith the com p lim ents we h eard quite a few com plaints and criticism s. .My ,«iea j w ould Is- to ta k e down the nan • of all thosv th a , have a com p laint and appoint thiun to n -xt y e a r’s com m ittee. a * The Revolutionary s> T he Eish F ry at th e P a rk o Sunday w as w ell atten d ed lh Elks did a sw >1, job. Back horn in th e land th a t Sehlitz m id fam ous, a fish try w as jus, an excusf' to have th a , fam ous foai ,5 suds in li, I«» brow n ho, ,1 s. • • • • * No, so, here in th e Ian 1 o' Ilow ers 1, m ust he a dry sta te so I though, until I s p ite d two Elks, or they may have I en (Dm duck into yonder hushes and ,u n due • a well guarded and cool bottle of th a t four le tte r stu il that ryhm es w ith ear. • • * • • T he ‘‘Bud Ain’, No .Jerk” elut is going gr«»a, guns although the l.onorahli • but misled, ed ito r from Gold Beach, is try in g valian tly to bust it up. L I Q U ID » • • • • I? r le tte r to m< explaining hei letinition of a je rk com es from her own. unahiidged. version oi W e b rte r’s sacr«‘d book No worxDr (he definition com es out B .l’.D ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ I w on'tdan answ er h«»r • th- in this colum n I can't deface tin tine PILO T m in , w ith w hat g« on in my mind in n ’gards to th m a tte r. I'll jus, let th • th o u s u .i’. and thousands <>l «aids she is re «.iving I m - my answ vr. * * ♦ ♦ * , (1.11 den (lul) Reports ¡Show W ax A Success Th«’ A zalea Gard« 11 C lub , a ’ «' ' m eans to ,' ank all those wh > | exhibited flow ors and a rran g e- I m ents, and also th ’ .Juniors who J wer«» r ’ally 0 0 ,standing in th e i’’ I w ork this y e a r anti all o th e r th.it I h» lp«‘d ,0 m ake «»nr flow er shoe , suetvss an«l a rem in d er th a , the G arden Club will m«»et next w k Ju n e 9th at the V.E W. H all, at W HAT IS M ODERN A R T ? , i , , Wh.it an - Hi «• m odern «_h...uKh M 'a.f by angel«, 1:30 p.m A report of th«* flower show and in sla lla lio n of nt w off- getting a t? Th »re a r as many ¡instead ,h»y w ere projected phys iet'is will b» held ical laws th at accounted for cel answers Io this question as there nro artists. Each one is striving estial m o w merits. I, w as through a series of sm all flat shaja» th at ch a ra c teriz e s art for som ething d ifferent concessions that trad itio n al art to-day. Each a rtist is try in g I«» express T he m<»«lvrn hom e and office of the high Renaissance «» th was him self in some p artícula! w av building dem ands an a r, tha 1 replaced w ith secu lar a rt. Th«’ To say that each artist was trv in g , functions w ith and is a p a rt ol to c re a te som ething Iw autitul above is only one, of m any con- the building. siderat ions that brought about w ould K» a half tru th For in As industry atlvanced, the t,»!«•- stance Goya (a pre-n n slern a rtist t a general decay of art phones, highw ay s and air,»Ian» s A series ol industrial rev o lu t did a serio« of cartoons on th«» sh ru n k o u r w orld. pe«>ple Ix'com ■ lio rn a s of war, th at have h •- ions had great« «1 a n«»w «‘lass of m ore conscious of inter-«!«',*»n«l come classics He w anted to con p»oplc T hey w ere th e rich m er- cue«’ «»n each other, anil this m vey ugliness He did this by d e | ch a n ts who had givat w ealth but tu rn .cfft'c,«»«! th«’ a r tis ts ’ ou,l«M»k picting demons and m u tilated bod I w ere lacking in c u ltu re This soc Social and econom ic conditions ies, etc Yet the p ittc r n and tona! ial class iM’conie the judges of art j'dd«'d ,«» th«' notion th a , th«’ valu «pialitv was so supn'b, th«»y have Th«» a rt in tu rn becam e as coarxe of an a r,ic l” dejx'nds on its fu n c t ! as the clientele that patronized i, classed w ith the great a r, of all ion Th«* notion th a, ohj«»c,s had tunes T he , o rtra lts he did, ear 'j* I Richly te x tu tv d fabrics, pink flesh an in trin sic value wax losing md win«’ hottKxs l»ecanie the ar, icr in lile, are by com parison, lists' them e Art had lost its noble g ro m u l Eins,« in s publication o' shallow and trivial the ,h«M»i'y of 1 la, v itx in«lir«’ctlv Among the modern a rtists, purjK»se Th«» a r,is , in tu rn iM’canu» «•fbx’te«! the philo- »ph« r ami tlv ,1 slave ,0 th«’ sensual appetit»?s O ro/sco (th e Mexican ,Himber« a r,is , alikv» in n s a close second to Goya for 1 of this new class of patro n s In Today we ar«» ca lgh, in a c u lt the «uni th«’ a rtist luxxuue tlegen- both ,mint’s, subject matt« r and u ral lag We cling ,<» a s«M’ial ■ e ra te d to th«’ level of a highly quality of the pictorial pr«*sent- c u ltu re th a , is on, o. pi ice in this sk ilk ’d machin«» at ion s«’ien,ifie ag«> hi refoi • m«»s, h«»me. By the end ol the n in eteenth Many a rtis ts an* prim arily eon- have paintings th at lx»l«»ng to ,h » century tD» cam era had threat cerned w ith unusual or interés», ninv,«’«»ntli century hanging on «‘i,«’d the a rtists fu tu re Since art ing arran g em en ts of color «un, the w alls ot a tw e n tie th eentin had I hm ’ ii striped of e v e ry th in ; form building, w ithout any kind o f To t j ’t a fair idea as to why tile hut ix-alism, the cam era could do overall plan 1, much Is U te r Th«' a r,is, c«»ul«l modern a rtists paint the way I have m in te d o n ’ only a t they «io, we h a w to consider the not comi*e,e with the cam cra< of th«» infinite num N r «»I factei . term s T his m eans th a t the a r t a rtis t m relation to his en v iro n ist had ,0 l«x'k tor a new direction that hav«> h«’l|H‘d jnold , .'.» motDi a ment 1, ,»'«’<»me increasingly evident a rt of hxlay T he a rtis t is elm gm : By the Iw’ginning of the nine that the a rtts , had to even,«' a to a e ra ,, th a , ’s all hu, lost ,«» teen th een tu tv . the academ ic art o u r nuxlern . ge It the a r,is , ist hail «legenvtated to the level new m arket tha, the cam« ta could Im p ’s ,0 m ake a living from his ¡not com pete with, or g o . up all of a m achine. He had become ueh a r, Iv e ith e r has ,0 tu rn '»et m- a slave to recording n a tu re as I to g eth er A t«'n«'W«'d uitenext 111 nn-nual” or er«’a ,e a ne«’d in nunl- h? saw it th at bis a rt was void light hr«»ugh, alwuit a new kind rn a rc h ite c tu re and industry of sea,«’lung and experininentati«»n of any real feeling o r ptil»p'M* F«» those w ho are s ta rtin g ’.» Miclielangido h adtused tho h u m I he jx»intelists a,,«'mp,e«l to Cro study a r, ax a profession, 1 sug- at? the illusion of light by a jux an figure to esp iv ss the stru g g le gex, tak in g a g«xxl Im k a, the tietw een the binding na tun» of , «|x>si,ion o, pure color. facts, ami then deciile <»n a d.r- A new mter«'s, in aes,h«'ttes earthly goods and the ns,»¡rations I’ction th a , is in keeping w ith t h ’ gave a 1 v'w in|M'tus to the a il tow a id a spirit,m l lite The hum .in tim es Since we can no, halt pro g h g u to was hut a symbol used to m«»vem«'nts th a t w are taking n»«»t ress the Los, we can hop» to do throughout the w orld The a rtist te ll a story of th e dual n a tu re ts to keep up w ith it ef m an's stru g g le l ikewise El »«ought a fte r a pur»' art th a , was fret» from subj«vt content, w ith Greco v «i pi »«xuipied w ith a sp iritu a l m essage regarding th ” th e premis«' th a t m usic d«*.*. no' tran sitio n s and conflicts betw een n«*e»l w«>rds «1 literary m eaning extossiv«» ph a su n s ol the flesh to th« m eaningtui or beautiful Many a rtis ts N 'c o n v c<»mp,«»t«»ly and th e C h ristian ideals During this tins'», th e churches pre-«»ccupi«'d w ith sh a jo and e«»,o: »en» th. m an, support fo, the «♦rchextrati on The “m u ltip le -1 mage*’ tth a t is a itis t Ar, during this tim e had a m essage. an«l the r«-?,]isn, w e- tr y in g ,«» show m ore than one only part of the to tal m eans ,»» i point of view at once» t*eeame th » to convey th at m essage 1, w as ,a«l S , l i p p i n g the pictu re of m ean when the m eans to an end b e ing ”»ss dt'coralions an«t m a n n e r cam e an end itself th«, n p te s - isms Ds <»m«‘ an o th e r movement e n ta tio n a l art »uftciod it» g n a t- Th.» com bination of m ultip le-im age an«l sto rk form in the xtw»i, eat set-buck W’lth a m iu ot scuntiti« «lis Jived hut influeneial movement covenes, tía* 2». n , batí h e ,ja d c a lk ’d cubism Sim ple a rc h ite c iu tv did aw».» to d estroy m an u th in sujtei n a u ra i pow eis St. n men as Cop w ith th«» Roroque d«xx»ratlons. and e rn icu s and N ew ton point «xl out tlw d a rk brow n and black colois s r e ts w ere not heuig t i n its place emerge«! the simple t!'“* IN EVERYDAY LIFE By Clyde Wood ART SUPPLIES YELTONS ILL h Bi Writes a clean erasable line miles long! ILL ♦ U . POINT Point never breaks, never needs sharpening! NEVER BREAKS, NEVER NEEDS sharp :. ii'-QiS. -— v ILL \ - VA***K ‘’ ' ’; ; ; ,x-5. ‘ | L L LINE NEVER VARIES, Liquid Lead will not smudge! NEVER SMUDGES! ill | L L WRITES A CLEAN TRY ERASABLE LINE . . . MiLES LONG! This unusual writing tnntrum ent. . . and be convinced! U S [ THIS H AN D Y OR DER FO R M . . . 1 0 COME IN TODAY . Please send me New Parker ♦ LL LIQUID LEAD Pencils at $3.95 each. (or use this mail order coupon) Please send me _ „ New Parker ♦ LL LIQUID LEAD Pencils at $3.95 each. Nome Address Name. City. Address Color 3; Turquoise, _ Red, Q Purple, Q Grdy, □ Black. City. .„S ta fo __ I Q Check or A4 0 State □ C harge Color; Q Turquois«, Hj Red, F j Pvrpl*¡ □ Cray; □ Q Check or A4. O. Black. C ^ orS* ARRELLS REXALL CHETCÜ DRUG W'c Give S ài H Green Slump»'» * I i