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T    M   M OOOOO RRRRR PPPPP OOOOO     RRRRR EEEEE V   V IIIII EEEEE W   W
     MM MM O   O R   R P   P O   O     R   R E     V   V   I   E     W   W
H    M M M O   O RRRR  PPPP  O   O     RRRR  EEE   V   V   I   EEE   W W W
     M   M O   O R   R P     O   O     R   R E      V V    I   E     WW WW
E    M   M OOOOO R   R P     OOOOO     R   R EEEEE   V   IIIII EEEEE W   W
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Volume #2                    November 8, 1995                     Issue #5
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                      CONTENTS FOR VOLUME 2, ISSUE 5

    Column: A Synopsis of The Story So Far  . . . Robert A. Fulkerson

    Column: From the Belly of the Dough Boy . . . . . . .  Matt Mason

    Swing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Joseph W. Flood

    One Tongues . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Richard Todd

    Tuki Mila Pahi  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .  Richard Todd

    Speechless  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Julie Schneider

    Woman -- A Terza Rima . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Janan Platt

    Nostalgia . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Janan Platt

    ponderings of a beached poet  . . . . . . . . . . . B.H. Bentzman

    jazzbender's sermon under the stars . . . . . . . . B.H. Bentzman

    jazzbender makes the aquaintance
                         of old salt charon . . . . . . B.H. Bentzman

    The Greatest Escape . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . B.H. Bentzman

    Testicular Trauma . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Drew Feinberg

    About the Authors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors

    In Their Own Words  . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . The Authors


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+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

Editor                               +                       Poetry Editor
Robert Fulkerson              The Morpo Staff                Matthew Mason
[email protected]                      +                   [email protected]

Layout Editor                                               Fiction Editor
Kris Kalil Fulkerson                                           J.D. Rummel
[email protected]                                      [email protected]

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_The Morpo Review_.  Volume 2, Issue 5.  _The Morpo Review_ is published
electronically on a bi-monthly basis.  Reproduction of this magazine is
permitted as long as the magazine is not sold and the entire text of the
issue remains intact.  Copyright 1995, Robert Fulkerson and Matthew Mason.
_The Morpo Review_ is published in ASCII and World Wide Web formats.  All
literary and artistic works are Copyright 1995 by their respective authors
and artists.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                              EDITORS' NOTES

  o "A Synopsis of The Story So Far" by Robert A. Fulkerson

  First off, I'd like to apologize for the extreme lateness of this
  issue. Many things (which I won't list in gory detail) have prevented
  the issue from being published on it's proposed date. In fact, we're
  almost two months overdue with this issue. We appreciate your patience
  and understanding. Rather than rush the issue out the door, we wanted
  to make sure everything was just right.

  Now, to move on to things changed. Since last I wrote a real column,
  over 5 months ago, many things have happened, both in my personal life
  and in the world of Morpo.

  Personally, I left the corporate business world as a programmer for
  Tandem Telecom and took a position at the University of Nebraska at
  Omaha as a full-time instructor of computer science. It's not that I
  didn't like my job at Tandem, but rather it was more a feeling like I
  was a square peg trying to fit into a round hole. After so many years
  in college (six with an almost-masters degree), I grew accustomed to
  the whole environment. I thrive on interaction with people, and
  sitting quietly in my cubicle at Tandem wasn't feeding that hunger.
  Now I interact with people every day (well, every
  Monday/Wednesday/Friday) and absolutely love it.

  I was also promoted to the position of Vice President of Novia
  Internetworking, an Internet Service Provider in Omaha, Nebraska.
  Between teaching full-time and vice-presidenting 3/4 time, life is, to
  say the least, rather hectic.

  Morpo-wise, we've added two new major features to our World Wide Web
  site. First, we've added real-time audio samples of some of the pieces
  in this issue being read by the author. Currently, Janan Platt can be
  heard reading two of her poems, Woman -- A Terza Rima and Nostalgia,
  and Richard Todd can be heard reading his two poems, One Tongues and
  Tuki Mila Pahi. Currently, only users of Windows or Windows 95 can
  hear these samples, as we're using the TrueSpeech audio technology.
  There should be a Macintosh and a Unix player soon. We'll also be
  adding Real Audio support by the next issue.

  This is very exciting, as I think that while the literature should
  speak for itself, it always casts a new and different light on the
  work when I hear the author read it. Matt Mason, the Poetry Editor for
  Morpo, has written hundreds of poems which I've read on-line and had
  my own interpretation of running around in my head. It wasn't until
  the summer of 1994 that I got to hear him read some of his own poetry,
  which was a truly wonderful experience, as there were subtle nuances I
  never noticed before. In the future, I hope we can do more here at
  Morpo with the spoken-word aspect of the works we publish. We'll also
  be looking at integrating some multimedia presentations into future
  publications, including re-printing a video file presentation of one
  of our previously published poems.

  Additionally, with this issue, we'd like to announce the grand opening
  of the Morpo Review CyberCafe, a World Wide Web-based conferencing
  application. We searched high and low for a Web-based "chat" program
  and finally found one we liked for its simplicity and elegance. Now,
  after reading Morpo online, stop by the CyberCafe and chat with other
  literature lovers in one of three rooms: General Discussion, Fiction
  Discussion or Poetry Discussion. In the future, we'll be hosting live
  conferences with some of your favorite Morpo authors. You can visit
  the CyberCafe at http://morpo.novia.net/morpo/chat/.

  So, there's a five-month synopsis of what's been going on. Though it
  sounds unlikely, look for the next issue of Morpo to hit the virtual
  stands around December 1st.

  o "From the Belly of the Dough Boy" by Matt Mason

  We've secretly replaced Matt Mason's normal column with new Folger's
  Crystals; let's see what happens:

  Everytime I open a magazine or newspaper, it seems that there's
  something new on the World Wide Web. I, myself, am pretty fascinated
  with that whole tetrazini, though a few things keep me from really
  piddling around there.

  Sure, I've been over at a friend's place in awestruck fascination as
  we waited for that whole damned file to transfer so that we could hear
  Godzilla roar on the Godzilla page. I've seen the nifty Morpo page and
  lots of other places.

  But, truth be told, I'm still working off an Apple iie, a computer so
  outdated that if it breaks I'll have no choice but to use it as a
  suitcase, a candleholder, or perhaps a nice casserole dish as there's
  no one left who fixes these things.

  I guess, technically, I do have Web access. Of course, with my
  computer's ASCII graphics and primitive ways, everything would look
  like Elton John's wardrobe closet put through a shredder, so it just
  ain't worth it.

  And you out there may ask, well.. hey.. you edit that keen electric
  rag called Morpo.. why not just take all the cash flowing in from that
  enterprise and buy a laptop or a UNIX system.

  Sadly, Morpo doesn't pay as well as it used to. Sure, I remember the
  old days when we'd be coated with expensive champagne, swimming in
  lentil-shaped pools full of marinara sauce and kiwifruit. But those
  days are over. Stiff competition from scads and scads (and scads) of
  other ezines has forced us to tighten our budget, eat more rice, and
  operate on Apple iie's.

  And.. oh.. wait a minute. That's not us. We never had a budget. You
  want that ezine three doors down, the one with the plastic flowers and
  the ceramic gnome in the yard.

  And why does everything smell like coffee?

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                                  "Swing" by Joseph W. Flood
    _________________________________________________________________

  I inherited the swing records. The box full of ancient 78s had been
  unceremoniously deposited in my room. A day later, the equally old
  phonograph player arrived. My father was cleaning out the last of
  Grandpa's things, one minivan load at a time. He hated the whole
  affair, going through the odds and ends of an old man's life,
  searching through dusty closet after dusty closet, encountering only
  detritus.

  Dad put the records in my room because he had run out of space for
  them in the garage. He could have put them in his office; none of
  Grandpa's old stuff was in there.

  "Here," he said, letting the box fall to the floor. I was lying on my
  bed, TV idly by, thinking of awful high school stuff. "You like music,
  don't you?" Dad tried smiling, lamely. He was just looking for a place
  to dump all this crap.

  "Whatever."

  That night, I opened up the box and discovered records. Records!
  What's a record? The records had pictures of men playing trombones on
  them. There were illustrations of people in uniform, neatly lined up,
  playing instruments. I took the records out of the sleeves and ran my
  fingers across the deep vinyl grooves. It was so different from a CD.

  "You'll never guess what I was checking last night," I told my
  friends. We were gathered at a lunch table in the Commons. They were
  eating junk food and scoping for women.

  "What?" someone said.

  "LP's."

  "LP? Who's that?"

  "Records, idiot. Long-playing records."

  "Huh." They were utterly uninterested.
    _________________________________________________________________

  When Dad hauled in the old phonograph, I pretended to be annoyed at
  the imposition. On the way out, he carefully shut the door behind him.
  I dragged the heavy phonograph across the room to a socket and plugged
  it in. The cover had a rusty metal latch. The speed of the turntable
  was controlled by switches as big as my hand. A plate on the side said
  that it had been manufactured at Versatile Manufactures in Cleveland,
  Ohio. I cued up the record and dropped the needle into the groove,
  just like I had seen them do it in the movies.

  Nothing happened. Then I found the round volume knob on the front of
  the box. I turned it and.... Sound, rich bass sound, poured out of the
  tiny speakers. It wasn't like my stereo, the music wasn't clear, it
  somehow was overlaid with background noise and static. I could see the
  needle tracing the groove, feeling the vinyl, and knew that that was
  where the sound was coming from.

  The music was rhythm, it was a song, a melody, like something from an
  old movie. I had never heard it before, ever, but knew that if I heard
  it more than once I'd be whistling the damn thing. I really hated
  myself but it was true--I liked this old crap. The mind tried to
  resist but was borne away by song.

  Who could I tell? I couldn't tell anyone. Grandpa was dead. If I told
  my friends, I'd be laughed out of Sun High. This was beyond old
  people's music--this was dead people's music.

  I went through the box and listened to all the records. It was a sick
  kind of fun, using this ancient technology. I liked the fact that the
  records were so big, much bigger than a CD. And heavy, the box full of
  them must have weighed fifty pounds. I liked watching the records spin
  inside the old box; I would see a scratch coming and then hear (and
  see) the record jump. I didn't worry about Mom or Dad finding me
  listening to all this fogey stuff--is our son weird? They both worked
  late and were never home. When they were, Dad tended to hole up in his
  office, typing, working on a spreadsheet. Mom would sit in the kitchen
  and work the phone, calling clients.

  There was still a lot of work to do with Grandpa's estate. Dad traded
  e-mails with my aunt regarding the "final disposition". He told me all
  this as if I cared. I couldn't see how it mattered very much--Grandpa
  was dead, all that was left was his stuff.

  Dad had finally emptied Grandpa's apartment. "It was like a rat's nest
  in there," he told Mom. She was standing in the kitchen, portable
  phone in one hand. Something was cooking in the microwave. Dad was
  still wearing a tie and the sun was washing over him, making him
  squint.

  "I couldn't believe how much shit he had saved. There were his old
  report cards, from the thirties. Timeslips from his first job--ten
  cents an hour. Letters from Mom, when he was fighting in the Pacific.
  Shoeboxes of old pictures, of their first house, of me, of those crazy
  picnics in the back yard. Pictures..."

  "Maybe we can put them on a CD-ROM?"

  "And do what then?" Dad loosened his tie. "Who would have time to look
  at it?"

  The microwave beeped. Cooking was finished.

  Mom carefully peeled the plastic sheet off of the plastic dish, steam
  escaping. The air conditioning kicked in, a loud whir that shook the
  house.

  "Well, you have to do something about those things in the garage,
  those boxes and furniture. I hate to leave my car on the street."

  "It's got an alarm," Dad said. Mom gave him a look. "But you're right,
  we need the garage back."

  Mom took her dinner out to the living room.

  "So," Dad said, opening the freezer, "we have Budget Gourmet, Weight
  Watcher's lasagna, bean burritos, Szechwan Chicken..."
    _________________________________________________________________

  I delved more into the music. I can't remember the songs, I can't
  remember the bands. They had names like old white people--Miller,
  Herman, Dorsey.

  And the song titles were a laugh--Jersey Jump, Woodchopper's Ball,
  Chattanooga Choo-Choo. They were simple songs about spring and trains
  and love, always on the way to love, or pining for lost love, or
  waiting for love to arrive on exactly the right train. No tales of
  teenage angst, suicide, self-mutilation.

  Then, one day, my records were gone. I found Dad in the living room,
  rocketing through cable channels, not looking at anything in
  particular. I stood there watching him until he noticed me.

  "What do you want?"

  "What'd you do with the records, you know, Grandpa's old records?"

  He turned to face me, setting the remote down. "I took them to a
  record dealer. Sold them."

  "Yea?"

  "Uh-huh," Dad said. A strange smile crept across his face. "You didn't
  want those old things, did you?"

  "No, it's just, it's just like it was Grandpa's stuff. I thought we
  might keep them."

  "No room. You heard your mother."

  "Yea, right."

  I walked out front and sat down in the driveway. Gnats buzzed around
  my face. I sat with my arms over my knees. Some kids I knew from
  school rode by on bikes, yelling obscenities at each other. Dad was
  inside watching cable TV. I sat in the dark, doing nothing but
  thinking.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                               "One Tongues" by Richard Todd
    _________________________________________________________________


my language is strange
to this place I know in my heart
let me then my friend
use your tongue

fat and fluttering
on flutes of rivers and wind
moaning in grass
wailing like night to stars

it wraps around thunder
bends to strike its drums
bellows spring
in flood and rumble of hooves

let me speak vowels
to dust and consonants to ice
take name to be spirit
holy as breath

so that spirit speaks spirit
and nameless live in words
and we touch together
edge of the sacred

touch together
unspeakable light
touch together
and feel the same touching

so we may talk
in common tongue
sacred earth holy sky
and the hoop that joins them

joins us
One Tongues
speaking together

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                             "Tuki Mila Pahi" by Richard Todd
    _________________________________________________________________


we gather shellfish
edges of knives
cracked to scrappers
of flesh and hair

whetted like teeth
to cut water
beneath our hands
to peel skin

we gather shellfish
rooting muck
with bare feet
touching the dark

flat curves
foot to fleshy foot
and string mother
of pearl in pendants

we gather shellfish
the old way
between fast
and slow rivers

in warm water
deep with hair
thick as milk
we grope mud

and gather shellfish
blades to pry
lock and twist
binding muscle

to scrape clean
the end of flesh
and dress bones
in new skins

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                               "Speechless" by Julie Schneider
    _________________________________________________________________


Your brother, angry
that you weren't at his wedding
refuses to speak.

You were too busy saving your life
drying out in detox
dancing on the head of a pin.

Even now, this second marriage is
dead
and he's still angry.

Funny, how some grudges
last longer than
life,

are stronger than
blood.
Brothers,

what difference does it make now
except to the
mute.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                          "Woman -- A Terza Rima" by Janan Platt
    _________________________________________________________________


At the club with pool and courts,
sweating on the gray carpet,
the copper woman in bike shorts,

busy like a sprocket, fit,
well not quite. When her head
weakens, her thighs remit.

Knees, a heart shape desired.
My mind reviews womanhood.
Her small muscles curved

and whittled like rosewood.
And I see her on the mat -
when I took dance I could

make ropey triceps like that.
A few wrinkles lined her skin
that was otherwise flat.

But her curves showed their sin
each muscle dipping under,
enough to hold a man's grin.

Each shape a spiral, going lower,
contour draped in worth.
And I felt this image's power

deep as seawater and birth;
how her movement pulls as yet
from a force outside the earth.

Distanced, she wasn't a threat,
a faceless icon. The men's
hot eyes loosened her step.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                                "Nostalgia" by Janan Platt
    _________________________________________________________________


Cheese puff crumbs
still savory
and neon orange
in the floor cracks,
nail clippings pulverized
between the mattress
and the headboard,
rose-colored sweater
fluff fluttering
in the heater grates,
dander, thread,
lipstick and flecks
of skin chiseled
by the wind and the blue
heat of the sun;
a woman
who reconciles fifty,
works the tines
of her fingers
through the ravelings
of gray and consults
the dust for a
simple answer.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                      "ponderings of a beached poet" by B.H. Bentzman
    _________________________________________________________________


cautiously stepping past the line of debris
of things the sea has not had time to digest
watching its restless skin clawing the beach
thinking about jazzbender laboring for preservation

this is religious truth jazzbender had instructed
you don't encounter raw experience in books and films
but must stay afloat on chaos the mother of us all
who's not malicious but indifferent to her sons
our ships imposing order on her the neversame
and if the captain's not god he's damn well moses

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                   "jazzbender's sermon under the stars" by B.H. Bentzman
    _________________________________________________________________


we collapsed in a field without
losing our grips on the bottles of beer
and gazed up at the many stars
jazzbender took another pull from
his bottle and pontificated

i got preached at by this baptist
who thinks his little dunking
gives him more wisdom than a sailor
he thinks he's got his hand on the tiller
can navigate the sea he's only scratching
believing it was created for him god damn
a whole sea miles deep and endless wide

if god made the oceans three feet deep
and lukewarm then i might have agreed
but he thinks jesus was a sailor
because he walked upon the water
hell if he could walk upon the water
what need would he have of us sailors

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

   "jazzbender makes the acquaintance of old salt charon" by B.H. Bentzman
    _________________________________________________________________


to be a sunken galleon in a tropical sea he said
where beyond the landlord's reach dreams like colored
fish would sway among the shelves and desk legs
in the watery twilight of the captain's cabin

in every city jazzbender found a river lapping docks
the sea's slender tentacles grasping at continents
the one road for a thousand exotic ports
how easy to slip the knot and drift back to sea

who would have thought a swabbie couldn't swim
the corpse drifting as far as the brackish harbor
to be found bobbing in the polluted slick and foam
knocking against the rusted hull of a stranded ferry

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                           "The Greatest Escape" by B.H. Bentzman
    _________________________________________________________________

  Normally my tour at Con Edison finishes at midnight. This wasn't a
  normal night, but then this is New York where anything that smacks of
  being normal is banned. This city is the fertile soil for the unusual.
  Only the seed of the world's unusual can take root here and blossom
  here. The rest either run away or are worn away. I was born in New
  York and I'm still here.

  My relief didn't arrive at midnight like he was suppose to, so I
  called the supervisor. Apparently Jim, the night tour guy -- my name
  is Arnie, or Arnold, which ever is easier for you -- anyway, Jim got
  sick at the last moment, possibly a heart attack, so his wife took him
  to the hospital. We later learned it was nothing but heartburn. My
  supervisor went down the list before he could find someone to cover
  and they took a while getting in. So I ended up riding the subway home
  at a very late hour.

  At three o'clock in the morning my car of the train was without
  conventional passengers. A young couple passed through the car, their
  hair bizarrely cut and standing on end. They wore black leather cycle
  jackets decorated with chromed chains. An elderly waitress, still in
  uniform and determined not to smile, passed through my car while
  clutching her purse. She was making her way closer to the conductor,
  changing cars at each stop.

  Only four passengers remained with me in my car. A skinny white guy,
  not dressed warm enough for the cold, was huddled in the far corner.
  He was forever reaching into baggy pants with those thin arms
  scratching and picking at God knows what. His problem, imaginary or
  not, had him dancing and jerking and keeping him from sleep.

  There was an old white woman not having any trouble sleeping, curled
  up against her several plastic bags filled with garbage that must have
  been her worldly possessions. She sat with her back to me, but I had
  noticed when I got on that she was missing a leg from the knee down,
  and this made me feel very sorry for her. She and the itchy guy
  probably lived here at night, on the subway. I was in their bedroom.

  The two remaining passengers were both Blacks -- I'm a white guy,
  something you wouldn't know unless I told you. Anyway, the one sitting
  farthest from me was real tall. He wore a dark green trench coat and a
  fuzzy fedora with a ridiculously wide brim. It was also a shade of
  green and had a colorful, five inch feather in the band.

  The black man sitting nearest to me, almost directly across from me,
  was drunk. You knew he was drunk because the stink of alcohol floated
  about his person. He was snoring, his body slumped forward, his head
  hovering just above his knees, his thighs supporting his forearms. His
  large hands and head bounced and bobbed with the movement of the
  train. While I was amusing myself with watching this little dance of
  his appendages, he suddenly jolted bolt upright.

  It had startled me, but it seemed even more of a surprise to him. His
  bloodshot eyes were wide with shock. He had broad shoulders and a very
  powerful build. I couldn't tell if his face was scarred or just deeply
  wrinkled. Coarse hair grew on his cheeks and a glimmering drop of snot
  was precariously hanging from one wide nostril. At first his eyes did
  not seem to see. Then they began to focus on their environment, and,
  sure enough, they found me. They locked on me.

  This big guy began to stand. With tremendous difficulty, he pulled his
  huge frame out of that seat using the adjacent pole, and I admit I was
  worried. Not that he was going to hurt me, big as he was, he was just
  plain too drunk to do that. I was afraid he was going to make a mess
  on me, that he might puke, or at the very least drip that hanging snot
  on me. With a push, he launched himself in my direction, swaying,
  coming most of the way, then stumbling a few steps backwards. The snot
  fell harmlessly to the floor and I was partially relieved. Finally he
  made the crossing, grasping the bar that ran over my head. After he
  was securely fastened he said, "Excuse me sir, but would you be so
  kind as to tell me where I am?"

  "You're on the E, guy," I told him.

  "The ee-guy?" he asked.

  "No, the E, just the E," I said.

  "I beg your pardon, but I am afraid I do not understand? I see we are
  on a train and that it must be night."

  "That's right, guy," I said. "You're riding the subway between
  Lexington Avenue and the Twenty-third Street and Ely Avenue station."

  "The subway!" he exclaimed, tossing his head from side to side to take
  it in. He seemed to be genuinely thrilled at finding himself on the
  subway. "I'm in New York! I made it! I did it!"

  Being in New York did not strike me as much of an accomplishment, yet
  he was overwhelmed with his being there; mind you, we're not talking
  about arriving at Carnegie Hall, merely the subway. He stared at me
  again, his eyes about to pop out. "Please tell me, what is today's
  date?"

  "March twenty-fifth -- no, the twenty-sixth," I informed him, while
  remembering the lateness of the hour. But no, he wanted to know the
  year? So I told him, 1982.

  The news was too much for him. Upon learning the year he seemed to
  faint, his body twisting and falling. I put my hands out to keep him
  from falling on me, but he caught himself, swirled, and plopped into
  the adjacent seat. I noticed the man in the fuzzy fedora was watching
  us and grinning. The drunk next to me was breathing heavy, as if
  exhausted, and mumbling New York and the year over and over. Once more
  he turned his attention to me and announced, "I did it,"

  "Did what, exactly?" I asked.

  "I'm alive." With that he looked at his big hands with their dirty
  fingernails. Once more his expression became one of shock and he
  gasped, "Schvartse". He looked at me in alarm. "My God, I am a Negro,"
  he said.

  "Comes as a surprise, does it?"

  He rose from his seat with unexpected grace and confidence. "Permit me
  to introduce myself," he announced in a booming voice that filled the
  car. While holding the nearest pole in one hand, he flamboyantly
  tossed his other hand in the air, and acclaimed himself, "I am the
  great Houdini!" He swung his arm across his waist and proffered a
  theatrical bow. He was unsteady.

  I could see past Houdini to the broad smile of the guy in the fuzzy
  fedora, who seemed to laugh, but not aloud. The skinny-itchy guy in
  the far corner took no notice of us, he was now scratching himself in
  his sleep. The old, crippled woman lifted her head, looked over her
  shoulder at us and acidly shouted, "Hey, Harry, can you keep it down?"
  She was instantly back to sleep. Houdini concluded his bow. He seemed
  dizzy for it and quickly sat down again.

  "Perhaps in 1982 you do not know of the magnificent Houdini?" The guy
  was astute, he could see my skepticism. He leaned a little closer with
  that awful breath of his. "I have accomplished the greatest escape of
  all time," he said to me. Then he leaned back and loudly announced,
  "soon the whole world --" He stopped short. This time his eyes
  appeared sad. "Nineteen eighty-two?" he whispered.

  "Nineteen eighty-two, guy," I reassured him.

  He leaned his head against the wall, just staring at nothing. I could
  see his strength dissipating. "Eighty-eight years," he murmured.

  "Is that how long you've been dead?" I asked.

  "No. That's how long I've been married."

  "Married?"

  "Oh my God. Beatrice, my darling. All this time I have been trying to
  get back and you, my sweet darling, must have died and gone on to
  Heaven."

  I sat quietly, just watching this hulking black man, his eyes squeezed
  closed. "I feel weak," were his last words, that is to say, was
  Houdini's last words, and he fell over.

  We were coming into Ely station. The guy in the fuzzy fedora was still
  grinning at my predicament, this heavy drunk lying across my feet.
  While the train was stopped in the station, no one getting off, no one
  getting on, I tried lifting Houdini off the dirty floor to get him
  back into a seat. He woke, somewhat, but gave only slight assistance.

  Unexpectedly, he pushed away. "Hey mahn, what chyu doin'?"

  "Just trying to help."

  "Well keep ya hands off me, I don' wan' no help." Without any further
  help from me, he stumbled to a seat and went back to sleep. He was
  still sleeping when I got off.

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                             "Testicular Trauma"
           Thoughts of Designer Imposter Body Spray by Drew Feinberg
    _________________________________________________________________

  I can remember the first time I saw the commercial vividly, for I was
  scarred eternally, not unlike the first time I had a woman look me
  square in the eye, force a smile, and mumble "Don't worry, I heard it
  happens to a LOT of guys." While channel surfing a few months ago, I
  found myself landing on MTV. It was The Real World Two that was on,
  and I couldn't change the channel because it was my favorite one,
  where Tammi purposely wired her mouth shut to lose weight. I was
  thinking about taking up a collection to keep it wired shut forever,
  but alas, I digress. A commercial interlude began with a Mentos
  commercial, and I was appalled to find myself mouthing along "Mentos,
  the freshmaker!" with my television. That was bad enough, but when I
  realized I was actually holding my remote triumphantly, not unlike the
  girl holding up her mighty Mentos, I knew I must turn off the
  television and get some fresh air. I reached for the "off" button on
  the remote, but found myself unable to hit it. Instead, I my eyes were
  glazed as I heard my RCA beckon: "The following demonstration has been
  made suitable for television." It piqued my interest, I figured I'd
  watch the commercial. Big mistake.

  It was a naked woman prancing around the screen with a spray can,
  covered only by two blue bars that followed her around covering her
  breasts, and her holiest of holies. Now, seeing an attractive naked
  woman bopping around on a television screen, this is not what scarred
  me. Don't you worry. In fact, it made me laugh hysterically. A
  voice-over was explaining "First, spray Designer Imposter Spray on
  your arms, and then spray some on your (beeped out the breasts), and
  the same time the woman was spraying it on the described areas. It
  went on to describe all the different places one could spray it, while
  the woman, seemingly in ecstasy, followed suit. It was truly a
  ridiculous image, the quasi-orgasmic quality of spraying some
  cheap-assed imitation perfume all over herself. She wound up spraying
  every part of her body really, as the voice-over told me that spraying
  this poisonous smelling fluid all over feels so good "you could spray
  them everywhere". But this of course, is not true. She missed a spot.
  If she was to spray the faux- spray in one particular place, shall we
  say, below the equator, this would not produce the ecstatic result as
  it provided elsewhere. I believe the correct word to describe the
  result would be "agony". But, thankfully, she missed that spot, so the
  commercial, which I thought was over wound up being just silly, not
  traumatic. Little did I know that in just ten seconds, I would be
  huddled in the corner of the room, rocking in the fetal position, hand
  immersed in my pants, a la Al Bundy.

  It seemed as though the commercial was over, as they showed a bottle
  of the stuff on the screen. But then it happened. Like all horrible
  things in my life, I saw it in slow motion, like when Marsellus
  Wallace in Pulp Fiction had Zed give him a proctologic exam without
  the courtesy of a sigmoidoscope. A nude man appeared on the screen,
  bottle in hand, blue bar on crotch. The voice-over triumphantly
  announced, "Available for men too!" The man, with a smug as hell grin,
  SPRAYS HIS CROTCH AND CHUCKLES! He laughs with this smirk on his face,
  as if it were the most euphoric and wonderful experience he had ever
  experienced. .And the commercial was over. It was an overload for my
  brain, I believe that was when I went into shock. In my trauma induced
  state, my entire life passed before my eyes. Well, okay, not my WHOLE
  life, but an incident in particular that involved myself, and my
  cajones.

  I flashed back to seventh grade, I must have been around twelve or
  thirteen years old. I remember being twelve quite well, it was when I
  was a tiny 5'4 boy, and knew that someday I would grow and grow and
  finally be able to conquer that freaking sign that said "YOU MUST BE
  THIS TALL TO GO ON THIS RIDE". Now I'm twenty-five. Hey, it's not that
  I'm still not allowed to go on certain rides, I just CHOOSE not to
  okay?? I could go on any ride I want, I just don't like waiting in
  line! Wait, I'm mixing up my traumas. Let's go back to my being
  twelvish.

  My dream girl, Penelope Horowitz, had asked me whether I wanted to go
  over her house on Sunday and study with her for an algebra exam. I
  could hardly sleep that night, knowing what would happen when I was
  alone with her, perusing the subtle nuances of algebra. I knew in my
  heart of hearts, that in the midst of studying, we would look up from
  the book, stare into each others eyes, admit our undying love, have a
  torrid affair, get married, have children, and happily grow old
  together. I just had to make sure everything was right. Sunday
  morning, I spent two hours getting myself absolutely perfect for the
  big study date. When I felt I was ready, I started to leave the house,
  but ran back into the bathroom.

  As I was singing along to "Islands in the Stream" on my radio, I
  realized I had forgotten the key to getting a woman to think of me as
  real man. Cologne. So I covered myself with my dad's English Leather,
  not thoroughly unlike the naked woman in the Designer Imposter
  commercial. But what if Penelope begged me to have sex with her? This
  was a real possibility. The prospect of her finding me "not so fresh"
  was strictly unacceptable. So in the middle of singing the Dolly
  Parton part of the chorus, I pulled out the waistband of my underwear,
  and did my final spray. "Islands in the stream...that is what we
  AREEEEEEEEEEEEGHHHHHHH!" I had never experienced such excruciating
  pain in my entire life. I had to cancel the date. I spent the
  remainder of the day holding my wounded huevos and cursing the day I
  had tried to spray myself "there". Penelope went on to date and marry
  my best friend. Oh Penelope, I miss you so...if you're reading this
  give me a call, I know I can make you so happy...

  Back to the story at hand. the man in the commercial had made the same
  mistake I had made, yet suffered no ill consequences. It was the most
  unreal and unjust act I had seen since Marisa Tomei had won the Oscar
  for Best Supporting Actress. But like the Tomei tragedy, this wrong
  could be righted, I knew it. I knew then why I had been put on this
  earth. It was to get that commercial modified. I wrote letters. I made
  urgent phone calls. I boycotted using the product. Okay, I hadn't
  really used it in the first place, but hey, manufacturers didn't know
  that. Yet every day that blasted commercial would come on time and
  time again. Hundreds of times, I saw that smug bastard spray his
  crotch. Was there no justice in the world? The horror, the horror. But
  just as I began to give up hope, it happened. The commercial began the
  same, bimbo dancing around in her Imposter glory. Same guy, blue bar
  on privates. But this time, he sprayed his CHEST, smirking and
  chuckling. Glory, hallelujah! Can I get an amen? There's no need to
  thank me. Just knowing that I might have saved one pubescent boy from
  making the same mistakes I made is enough. All I ask for is a page in
  the history books documenting my selfless effort to make the world a
  better place to live. Or maybe a statue.

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                                     About the Authors
    _________________________________________________________________

  o B.H. Bentzman ([email protected]) was born in the Bronx in 1951.
  "My greatest achievement is to earn the companionship of a splendid
  woman, to whom I have been married for eight years." He earns his
  income working for AT&T as a Communications Technician. "And I am
  presently alive and well in a suburb of Philadelphia."

  o Drew Feinberg ([email protected]) is twenty-something and resides
  in East Meadow, NY where he is currently a full-time philosopher. He
  enjoys watching movies and then bitching about them, joining crusades
  he knows he cannot win, and singing TV theme songs to anybody within
  earshot especially the "Facts Of Life." Drew and his partner-in-crime,
  Jen, are starting their 'zine "Marvin Nash's Ear" in the very-near
  future so they can rant as long as they like to make the world smile
  and/or think, preferably both. For a free subscription, just send a
  request and the name of your favorite childhood board game to
  [email protected].

  o Joseph W. Flood ([email protected]) had this to write:

    "Many years later, as he faced the firing squad, Colonel Aureliano
    Buendia was to remember that distant afternoon when his father took
    him to discover ice."



  Unlike the doomed Buendias, my family always had ice in the freezer so
  we escaped one hundred years of solitude. Instead, I grew up
  peacefully in Wheaton, Illinois, a small town on a commuter line
  outside of Chicago, IL . After fourteen rather mundane years, my
  family left ice and snow for sand and sun (sort of like those kids on
  Beverly Hills 90210 but in a more modest income bracket). We arrived
  in Orlando in the middle of summer and still stayed. I spent my high
  school years in Florida. Then, graduation loomed (unlike those pesky
  kids on Beverly Hills 90210) and I had to go off to college. I chose
  American University because they actually gave me some cash and
  because I wanted to do more with my life than just hang out at Daytona
  Beach, like, you know? I majored in International Relations and
  minored in Literature. College has a way of cooking the interest out
  of you. You start fresh and excited about a subject and four years
  later all you can think is, "Get me the hell out of here!" After I
  graduated, I worked for a couple years for a banking consulting firm
  as an Information Assistant. Then, I moved back to Orlando to work on
  the Great American Novel. Instead, I wrote the minor Florida novel. My
  Inheritance (that's the name of my 65,000 words) is the first-person
  account of a high school "burn-out" who escapes his abusive father
  (and some legal troubles) by running off to college and masquerading
  as a college student. It's completely fictional--my parents are
  wonderful. My friends loved it and a couple agents actually read it
  but getting a first-novel published is a 1,000,000 to 1 shot. So, I
  moved back to The District and a got a job at The World Bank.

  o Janan Platt ([email protected]) was born in Redding, California in
  1957. She has published one chapbook of poetry (Alpha Beat Press,
  1993) and her poems have appeared in Poetry Flash, The Tomcat, tight,
  and Recursive Angel. She is also a contributing editor of The Albany
  Poetry Workshop, a World Wide Web Internet poetry forum
  (http://www.sonic.net/web/albany/workshop).

  o Julie Schneider ([email protected]) is a past winner of the
  Washington Poet's Association Totem Award and has the requisite degree
  in English Lit. She works as a LAN Administrator and among other
  talents can find lost icons while you wait. Favorite poets are Molly
  Peacock, Erica Jong and Robert Frost. This is her first published
  work.

  o Richard Todd ([email protected]) grew up at the confluence of
  North and South Platte Rivers in western Nebraska. When he came of age
  he wandered from Nebraska to New York City to Montana to Colorado and
  back to Platte forks. He now writes, grows kids and lives on the edge
  of the valley. Recent work of Richard Todd is found on the web "When
  Arcs of Circles Touch" at
  http://ianrwww.unl.edu/ianr/wcrec/water/arctouch/index.htm.

+--------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                                         In Their Own Words
    _________________________________________________________________

  o Swing by Joseph W. Flood
         "Like the protaganist in Swing, I have lately developed a taste
         for the music of earlier generations. At first, I was
         embarassed by my new like and would hide the offending CDs from
         visitors, but now I proudly display my Sinatra box set."

  o One Tongues by Richard Todd
         "One Tongues is about discovering languages. Tongues we all
         know but which we forgot or misplaced or which were taken from
         us. To relearn these ways of speaking and touching. These are
         languages of this place called Great Plains. Written after
         thinking about Great Grandmother Christina who refused to learn
         English."

  o Tuki Mila Pahi by Richard Todd
         "Tuki Mila Pahi means 'to gather shellfish knives'. Lakota name
         for North Platte River in western Nebraska. We mucked the
         marshes barefoot searching for shellfish. A strong way to touch
         the river, to root in it. In the search you lift to surface
         many other things hidden in the mud. Some can be made into
         useful tools. Others scare the hell out of you."

  o Speechless by Julie Schneider
         "This is the quintessential 90's dysfunctional family poem.
         Apathy, denial, hidden anger and lack of communication; it's
         all there, with the hope that things could be different. It
         speaks for itself."

  o Woman -- A Terza Rima by Janan Platt
         "In Woman, I wanted to show the reader a bit of that heavy-duty
         nonverbal environment in today's typical health club. For
         months I tried many different versions and recycled two grocery
         bags full of crumpled paper. Then, in Scott Reid's Albany
         Poetry Workshop on traditional poetic forms, the words seemed
         to find their place within the Terza Rima framework. Poetic
         forms, to me, feel like tap dance rhythms."

  o Nostalgia by Janan Platt
         "I write most of my poems hearing other people's voices, not my
         own, reading the words. That was the case with Nostalgia, a
         short poem about the beautiful and simple way some women view
         the world and themselves when no one else is looking."

  o ponderings of a beached poet, jazzbender's sermon under the stars,
         and jazzbender makes the aquaintance of an old salt charon, by
         B.H. Bentzman
         "The three poems selected here are part of a series of eight
         poems written about a friend. Over many a good glass he
         exhanged his experiences at sea for my experiences on land. I
         then took his stories and character and embellished them. He
         was pleased at my attempts to metamorphosize him into a
         semi-mythical sailor. What is ficticious and what is true about
         Jazzbender (not his real name) I leave to the reader's best
         guess. This much I would like the reader to know, that the poem
         jazzbender makes the aquaintance of old salt charon was
         composed before my friend took his own life. Those of us who
         knew him were never surprised by his last act. We couldn't stop
         it from coming. It made us angry, but it didn't stop us from
         loving him, nor do we want to stop remembering him."

  o The Greatest Escape by B.H. Bentzman
         "My short story, The Greatest Escape, was developed from an
         entry in my notebook/journal. Following a dull period of
         several days in which nothing noteworthy was happening in my
         life, in a desperate act to make my notebook/journal
         interesting, I concocted this story about my late night ride
         home on the subway. A friend, who later read the entry, thought
         the late night tale true. Years later, I extracted the story
         from my notebook/journal, removed myself and invented a
         fictitious persona to tell the story."

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                       WHERE TO FIND _THE MORPO REVIEW_


Back issues of The Morpo Review are available via the following avenues:


!  = Electronic Mail (Send the command "get morpo morpo.readme" in the body
    of an e-mail message to [email protected], exclude the quotes)

  = Gopher (morpo.creighton.edu:/The Morpo Review or
    ftp.etext.org:/Zines/Morpo.Review)

  = Anonymous FTP (morpo.creighton.edu:/pub/zines/morpo or
    ftp.etext.org:/Zines/Morpo.Review)

!  = World Wide Web (http://morpo.novia.net/morpo/)

  = America Online (Keyword: PDA, then select "Palmtop Paperbacks", "EZine
    Libraries", "Writing", "More Writing")

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                      SUBSCRIBE TO _THE MORPO REVIEW_


We offer two types of subscriptions to The Morpo Review:

  = ASCII subscription
       You will receive the full ASCII text of TMR delivered to your
       electronic mailbox when the issue is published.

  = Notification subscription
       You will receive only a small note in e-mail when the issue is
       published detailing where you can obtain a copy of the issue.

  If you would like to subscribe to The Morpo Review, send an e-mail
  message to [email protected] and include your e-mail address and
  the type of subscription you would like.  Subscriptions are processed
  by an actual living, breathing person, so please be nice when sending
  your request.

+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                      ADDRESSES FOR _THE MORPO REVIEW_

! [email protected] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Robert Fulkerson, Editor
! [email protected] . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Matthew Mason, Poetry Editor
 [email protected]  . . . . . . . . . . . .  J.D. Rummel, Fiction Editor
! [email protected]  . . . . . . . . . .  Kris Kalil Fulkerson, Layout Editor

! [email protected] . . . . . .  Submissions to _The Morpo Review_
! [email protected] . . . . . . . .  Requests for E-Mail subscriptions
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+----------------------------------------------------------------------------+

                        SUBMISSION GUIDELINES FOR TMR


Q: How do I submit my work to The Morpo Review and what are you looking for?

A: We accept poetry, prose and essays of any type and subject matter.  To
  get a good feel for what we publish, please read some of our previous
  issues (see above on how to access back issues).

  The deadline for submissions is one month prior to the release date of
  an issue.  We publish bi-monthly on the 30th of the month in January,
  March, May, July, September and November.

  If you would like to submit your work, please send it via Internet
  E-mail to the E-mail address [email protected].

  Your submission will be acknowledged and reviewed for inclusion in the
  next issue.  In addition to simply reviewing pieces for inclusion in
  the magazine, we attempt to provide feedback for all of the pieces that
  are submitted.

  Along with your submission, please include a valid electronic mail address
  and telephone number that you can be reached at.  This will provide us with
  the means to reach you should we have any questions, comments or concerns
  regarding your submission.

  There are no size guidelines on stories or individual poems, but we ask
  that you limit the number of poems that you submit to five (5) per issue
  (i.e., during any two month period).

  We can read IBM-compatible word processing documents and straight ASCII
  text.  If you are converting your word processing document to ASCII,
  please make sure to convert the "smart quotes" (the double quotes that
  "curve" in like ``'') to plain, straight quotes ("") in your document
  before converting.   When converted, smart quotes sometimes look like
  capital Qs and Ss, which can make reading and editing a submission
  difficult.

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          Our next issue will be available around December 1st, 1995.

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