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Over 60 ... And Getting Younger: November 17, 2011

Versus!

I was attending a lecture by Leon Uris at the 92nd Street YMHA years ago when he startled me. Uris, the author, was complaining that Otto Preminger, the director of the highly praised film Exodus, had ruined his image of the book.

I was completely shocked because I truly enjoyed the renowned movie with Paul Newman, Sal Mineo and Eva Marie Saint. Uris said that it did not represent his concept of what he was thinking when he penned the momentous novel.

I realized that it was a case of book versus film. It also illustrated that different media have divergent needs. Neither one is right and neither one is wrong.

It is a simple case of the book versus the play versus the film. To me, the book is the purest form. As we read, we form our own mental pictures and our personal images differ from everyone else’s. The imagination has no boundaries for our individual interpretation. We cast the writing with our own heroes and our own visual pictures.

Was Gregory Peck the exact picture for Herman Melville in Moby Dick? Was Julie Andrews a better Eliza Doolittle than Audrey Hepburn? Did Rex Harrison communicate a perfect Henry Higgins?

Recently I saw Liam Neeson as Jean Valjean and Geoffrey Rush as Javert in Les Miserables. Were they better than Fredric March and Charles Laughton?

The musical version of Les Miserables was fantastic. I sang and hummed the tunes (to myself of course.) It carried the basics of the plot, but much was left out. The films tried, but they could not put on celluloid every twist and turn of Victor Hugo’s huge novel.

We are condemned to enjoying each medium on its own. Comparisons to other media are fun, but they are quite useless. Books have their audience and theater has its own fans, while film adaptations can be reviewed by a mass audience. Enjoy all three, and don’t struggle over which is better: savor them all!

News

School Budget (Proposition #1)

Yes: 1,736
No: 848

School Board Trustees

Amy Pierno: 1,871
Evy Rothman: 1,794

Library Budget (Proposition #2)

Yes: 1,801
No: 774

Library Board of Trustees

Stefanie Nelkens: 1753

John F. Kennedy High School DECA students declared finalists in national competition 

The Plainview-Old Bethpage Central School District announced that eight John F. Kennedy High School (POBJFK) DECA teams were recently named finalists at the International Career Development Conference in Salt Lake City, Utah. Over 50 students from POBJFK competed at the conference, which was attended by 12,000 students and advisors from across the world.

In order to be selected for the final round of competition, students had to deliver several presentations over the course of five days. Plainview Old-Bethpage DECA was very successful, with several teams outscoring hundreds of competitors to achieve finalist recognition.


Calendar

World War II Historical Encampment
Saturday, May 19

All Breed Dog Show
Sunday, May 20

Stroke Awareness Program
Monday, May 24


Columns

Frothing
Written by Michael A. Miller

Payson’s Legacy
Written by Mike Barry

Drilling Down: The Student Loan Crisis
Written by Michael A. Miller