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Page: of 20

NEVADA COUNTY NUGGET
Ped sA stacy etast made stmiee CT cost minh small eee itd Bal eest existe ieelT ces! Puinfiain eo QlY ah 8
Hi Hi aio .
RDITORIAL July 22, 1965
LOCAL THEATER PLANS
SHOULD INCLUDE THE
DAVIS DRAMA GROUP
Excitement is running high in Nevada
City this week as the members of'the
Liberal. Arts Commission prepare for
the centennial celebration at the old
Nevada Theater next weekend.
The excitement, the almost total
involvement of the community, and
the amazing rapidity with which
tickets to the production have sold,
are strong indication that small theater
can work in Nevada City.
This was not always the case. When
the Liberal Arts Commission was
formed about a year ago, there were
some real doubts expressed thata
theater could be supported here. There
were even doubts expressed about
whether the group wanted to be tied
in with the offer from the drama department of the Davis campus of the
University of California to provide
summer theater here.
But despite all the talk, division of
opinion and uncertainty of goals, the
group forged ahead. They made the
revitalization of the vacant Nevada
Theater their goal and established the
recreation of the 100 year opening of
the oldtheater as their first big effort
and the springboard from which to gain
the support for the theater movement.
Now the project is in full swing and
the people who debunked the idea that
a theater here could ever be a success
need only look at the box office
receipts. The tickets to both days of
the event production-were almost sold
out the first day they went on sale.
Almost afl of the tickets to the local
production have been sold locally. If
the theater group could combine with
the drama department at Davis so that
Davis could produce plays here, the
ticket distribution to future productions would be much wider and so
would the attraction and the fame of
the local theater.
While the community is full of expectation and excitement over the
coming historical extravaganza and
theater centennial, it might be a good
idea to point out that the role of Davis
in this whole scheme should not be
overlooked.
The Davis drama department some
years ago offered to bring its summer
drama classes here and stage pro-ductions. It was also suggested that
if a theater couldbe found, eventually
the facility could also be used for
lectures and univers ity extension
courses.
;
To present and sustain a regular
series of summer theater offerings is a
much bigger and more expensive
undertaking, and here the talent and
theater know how and resources at
Davis will doubtless be welcomed by
allthose whoare working so hard this
week. All told, we may see Nevada
City inthe making as one of the small
theater centers of the state.
IN THE FOOTHILLS VEIN
NEVADA CITY BECOMES AN
ISLAND OF CULTURE
Nevada City Mayor Arch McPherson last week issued
a special proclamation declaring July 30 and 31 to be
Nevada Theatre Days in honor of the Nevada Theater
centennial gala being staged by the Liberal Arts Commission.
The mayor, who is well-known for his vocal and
bagpipe accomplishments, came forth with a proclamation socolorful, it can almost be considered a
production in itself and deserves repeating in part
here.
He noted that the theater first opened its doors in
1865 "in this Queen City of the Northern Mines and
WHEREAS the most brilliant Luminaries of the Opera,
Drama and terpsichore fought valiantly for the privilege of appearing in the Nevada Theater, considering
this to be a High Pointif not the Acme of their careers
and WHEREAS it was due in part to the Nevada Theater
that the City of Nevada, now known as Nevada City,
gained World Renown as a lusterous Island of Culture
and civilization surrounded by a howling Wilderness
of Ignorance and Boorhishness.." Very fancy. We
hope the gala production is a stepping stone to revitalizing the theater to its former high esteem.
i eee eeseeeeees
WATER HAS always been and will continue to be a
major topic of discussion in California, Those who
have it want to keep it and those who don't have it
want to get it. Now another problem arises as more
and more thought and work go into building economic
plants to desalize sea water. Western Water News,
publication of the Irrigation Districts Association of
California, points out that there isa quarter of a pound
ofsaltin a gallon of sea water. Someone has figured
out that there is about 4.5 million cubic miles of salt
in allthe oceans, The big question coming up is where
we are going to put the salt when all the sea water is
desalinized.
eeeeseee#8e#e#s *
WE WERE delighted tohear that afterno one appeared
for or against the proposal tochange the name of Loma
Rica Airport to Nevada County Airport, the supervisors
decided to leave the ndme unchanged. What is still”
unclear is whocame up withthe idea in the first place,
---Don Hoagland
CALIFORNIA ae
ONE REASON WHY ADLAI
LOST THE ELECTION
A lot of people are remembering a lot of things about
Adlai Stevenson, now thathe is dead and can't answer
back, and I amone of them. I can tell you, for
example, one of the reasons why he lost the Presidentialelection of 1956, It was because he followed
a suggestion I gave him.
You will remember that in the summer of 1955 it
looked pretty certain that Adlai would seek and obtain
the Democratic nomination again, and that President
Eisenhower, heart attack or no heart attack, would
be the Republican nominee again--and he would win,
unless the voters could somehow be jarred into voting
otherwise,
Up at Lake Tahoe that summer, I presented my
scheme to William McCormickBlair, Stevenson's law
partner and closest political aide, Adlai, I said,
could not possibly win ifthe election became a contest
of personalities, because Eisenhower had too much of
a personal hold on the American people. Nor could
he win, Ithought, merely by criticizing the Eisenhower
record, Itwas at best lackluster, but the country was
at peace once more, and prosperous.
Therefore what we Democrats needed was a positive
issue that could be dramatically described and illustrated, something that might take the play away from
the Eisenhower personality,
I suggested that the Stevenson campaign be centered
around the theme of a "New America"--a program
which emphasized the practical possibilities in
American society, particularly as they related to the
land and our great natural resources, After all, hadn't
some of our most successful politicians--James K. Polk,
Theodore Roosevelt, and FDR, for example--won
tremendous support by appealing tothe public's fascination with the physical environment?
My plan went further: I suggested that the new and
suddenly popular medium of television be used to
illustrate aspects of the New America program, I
envisioned Gov, Stevenson appearing on TV beside a
very complicated looking scale model of a salt water
conversion plant, for example, After explaining why
we needed a speeded up saline conversion program,
the candidate could press a button, and the machine
could be observed by millions of fascinated A mericans
to begin to gurgle and blink, producing a cup of fresh
water out of one end--which the candidate could then
ceremoniously drink,
Needless to say, Adlai never cottoned to that particular suggestion. He wasa great spokesman for
America, but not precisely for the machine age,
Blair, however, saw enough in’ my proposal to suggest
that I summarize it ina memo, which I did practically
on the spot and handed it to him, He indicated he
would show it to Adlai when he got back to Chicago,
A year later in Chicago, on the night when Adlai
was nominated for President at the Democratic convention, Iwas introduced tothe great man ina crowded
hallway, He said to me, "I'm stealing a phrase from
you in my acceptance speech tomorrow night, "
The phrase was in fact the "New America, " which I
hoped would take its place beside Woodrow Wilson's
New Freedom, FDR's New Deal, and Truman's Fair
Deal, Butit never really caught on, probably in part
because Adlai could never be so corny as to promote
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