Page 4 Sam Finds God In The Phone Book By Raymond Martin I thought the afternoon would pass slowly. I really wasn’t expecting to find God in the phonebook. But something inside me prevented me from passing up the easy solutions. Just as I was about to tiy the yellow pages I found it Halfway down the second column. It just about bit my nose off. God A. 351 E 52 St.. 666-4666. Some thing inside me felt disap pointed. I was at least expecting him to have an unlisted number. Butlcouldn'tfightfate. I picked up the phone and dialed... no answer. That made sense. God would be a very busy man. Particularly in New York. I checked the Browning. If this case took a weird twist it could become my best friend. I walked outinto the city. As I stood next to the black bomber of an old car, I realized Td been wrong before. It was a ’3B alright but it was a Buick, not an Olds. I got in and turned it over. It sounded like “The Spirit of St Louis”, but it ran. Well at least it trotted. As I lurched and wheezed my way to midtown, I realized it would take some time to get used to a pre-war standard shift I had just found second gear when I arrived. It was a painfully typical midtown highrise. I walked to the elevator through the potted fj, They caught me. Another second and I could have been in bounds, / ~T~ht.tnw\ve s Rt W C LAi T fc-L tcTICN,., plants. I checked the directory. God A.—1209. I got on the elevator, smiled for the camera, pressed 12 and three minutes of musak later I was standing at' God’s door. I knocked as respectfully as possible. The door was answered by a man who could only be described as awesome. He was 6T\ wore a dark grey with pale yellow pinstriped, three piece suit; he had short brown hair just beginning to grey. He looked like an IBM executive enjoying a quiet evening at home. Even down to his condescending smile. “May I help you?” he asked as he gazed at me with mild distaste. “Yes, my name is Sam Shmuck and Tve been hired to verify that you exist,” I said. “Please come in," he offered. His apartment was astound ing. It had a lovely view of the East River through a picture window that made up most of one wall. Another wall was taken up by the biggest, most massive fireplace Id ever seen. On top of it was the most gauche and yet compelling awesome piece of statuary I ever hope to see. It was a huge jade eagle in full wingspread. As I was regaining my breath, God offered me a drink, which I gladly accepted. As I sat down with my rye and ginger ale, I asked him for his first name. He chuckled for a \ j|jM w > moment, looked me right in the eye and said matter-of-factly, “Almighty, Schmuck. I suppose you’ll want an explanation. Well my grandfather had his name legally changed to God when he found his birth name interfere ring with his bible and hymnal trade. Since the name change the God family has made a fortune in the religious equip ment trade. And as for my first name... well, my father had a weird sense of humor. My brother was named Jesus." It is difficult to smile while you choke on a rye and ginger ale, but I worked it out Finally I was able to rasp, “Then you're not ‘The God’?” “Well, since Jesus died in a bathroom accident five years ago Tve been my family’s only God. But to answer you, Tm the only God I know of.” I decided I was barking up the wrong diety. I drained my glass, stood up and moved to die door. I turned and said, “Well thank you Mr. God, but you’re not quite who-or what Tve been hired to find.” He turned purple and screamed at me, “Look Me dammit I didn’t ask you in here to tell me I don’t exist Get your scummy coat out of here!!” After leaving the building I entered a phone booth \and dialed the number that Ms. Famore had given me. As I was dialing the last digit a black THt _S*O Seoptf w p t4(V^ '%?■ ?fc £.P. * 7 C.C. Reader V / .. ..9 ? vOTfi9 fo« *'• ' * * i* ' ‘ * * ’ •»V » « y Cadillac sedan pulled up next to the booth and die business end of a tommy gun pointed in my general direction. As I was listening to the quiet ringing in my ear, a far more attention getting noise splattered around me. I felt like a cockroach caught inside an electric typewriter. I studied the dirty steel floor with a passion I thought Td lost earlJy in med school. As the /shooting stopped and the Caddy ca reened away, I rolled out into a combat crouch dripping shreds of glass along the way. I whipped out the automatic, ripping my coat and cutting my forehead in the process. I squeezed off two shots which hit a taxi, which jammed a nearby wall, and emitted some half-hearted screams. As I got my heart, stomach and intes tines back into place I realized the gun’s recoil had blasted me two blocks away. I put it in my other pocket and slowly walked back to my car. I consoled myself with the fact that the car could be found again; a black Caddy, four door, New York registration... New York regis tration...“ Shit,” I hissed. I weaved through the traffic of police cars and ambulances. I asked myself if this was really the stuff dreams were made of. Right then I wouldn’t bet a pint of Hbetean Yak urine on it I turned and rumbled toward Mulberry Street ”PiteiibtTA/r Font, November 11,1976 Students Receive Awards Dr. Daniel M. Poore, chairman of the Master of Public Administration program at Penn State-Capitol Campus, has announced that four students have been awarded Public Service Education Fel lowships in the M.P.A program at campus. The fellowships come from the U.S. Dept of Health, Education and Welfare, under title IX of the Higher Education Act of 1965 and provide tuition and a $3OOO stipend for 12 months. The four fellowship recipi ents are Lome B. Bottomley of Mansfield, Ohio, a sociology/ psychology graduate of Miami University of Ohio; Christina M. Cox of Elizabethtown, Pa., a social science graduate from Penn Sate-Capitol Campus; Gerald El Cross of Plains, Pa., a graduate of Kings College in political science; and Douglas E Hill of Coraopolis, Pa., a political science graduate from Westminster College. The M.P.A. program in which the recipients participate requires 39 graduate credits, 9 of which will require field study work done over a period of 8 months in a state or local government agency or health institution. The program is intended to prepare the participant for a career as an administrator or director in local, state and federal government, the health care delivery system, welfare insti tutions or other public service organizations. SG A Attendance Officers Present: Cliff Ebhbach, Ray Martin, Carol Uhlig Eke used: Beth Kopas Absent: Maria Robinson, Kitty Nestor Present: Charles Alesky, Katie Fee, Terry Gallagher, Lenny Klonitsko, Vem Martin, George Rovnack, John Stemick, Lou Ann Mahalick Present: Charles Cales, Nellie Jiwani, Diane Lewis, Bill Long, Joe Mahar, Elliot Reiff, Christine Van Zandt Special run-off election for Junior SGA Senator and Senator At-Large for Social Science will be held on Monday, Nov. 21, from 9:15 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. at the round table. VOTE! <2 ? © o O -'n; J Jr W-f j- |p, | V /- ■; O A * • * H * fiftr wee -* Tgo e*Jc Sr. Senators Jr. Senators Hfy- X> You THINK THgf Scp£- ATHlfc'e uir". pPTRtig It • C a « * 0 h '