OCR Text |
Show 8 left hand, though he was left handed, harrassed him with wiffle bats as big as xxixxxxixxxx-xxxxx flag poles and dribbled house sized basketballs about his head. Football helmets plopped onto little Jarvis's s<vlt from above. Every week he had to watch the Browns beat the Redskins, HKXXXXXHKXXXSXXKXXXX'XK or the Eagles, or some other hapless team who didn't have giant black men named Brown who could run through anybody. Though one Sunday Jarvis watched the old black and white Zenith and saw*team in dark, dark uniforms 2 just as big as the Browns and maybe a little bigger with ixxxxxxxxx a little 'ny' on the side of their dark helmets. Big Jim Brown kept getting tackled and Red kept cursing somebody named Huff and the big dark xS team named the Giants beat the Browns. Jarvis felt good on Sunday for the first time in a long time. He didn't even mind the thought of kindergarten the a next day. He went to xixxx- bed without arguing and instead of thinking about being a dog, which was his favorite thing to think about, he thought about Sam Huff grabbing Jim Brown and Red by the necks and banging their heads together. He thought about New York where giant dark Peering behemoths crawled out of sewers feMMMMg- westward, to Cleveland, where there were Browns to crush. Red really wasn't that xx upset about the Browns. They won their share. Red was upset because all his talents were going to pot. He could paint, sculpt, draw, print signs, play the guitar and sing too, but he didn't do any of those things. He worked at the £;'<e Forge, xxfx" After high school, when things began to pick up just before the war, he applied for the Art Editor job at the Erie Times News by sending in his drawings. He got an interview. But when the Managing Editor saw how young he was he didn't offer Red the job, he offered him amfst scholarship to the Cleveland Art Institute. "Forget about it," said his mother, Emma Loop. "You've been in school since you could walk. There's a xxxxxx depression. We got a house to pay off. Get a job." So he went to work with his father, Whitey Loop, at the Forge. He gave xix most his salary to Emma for the mcftgage, but once he xxxx met Helen and married her, he was on his own. With a little extra money he saved, he went partners with his brother-in-law, 9SBS, in a little X variety store down by the east bay. Then the war broke out and he joined the Marines. When he got back, fjPFI Mini ' Mill I '"I and lost all the money. He'd also |