Spencer Heath's
Series
Spencer Heath Archive
Item 3114
Newspaper column showing the imagination of Heath’s hostess in Southern California, publicist Frances Norton Manning
Orange County Register, October 22
NIGHTSIDE
Orange County
By Forest Kimler
What with the bomb shelter craze, Mrs. H. T. Manning still insists she has the greatest gimmick going for a nightclub.
The transplanted New Yorker can’t understand why some enterprising developer doesn’t sink an entire club underground and start a chain of bomb-proof “Carlsbad Taverns.”
You have to admit it’s an intriguing free enterprise answer to the fallout shelter bit. The food, drink and entertainment would be right on hand in case of an attack and if the customers ran out of money during the contamination period, the barkeep could always honor credit cards and run up tabs until the all-clear sounds.
And what an audience for an entertainer! Not one captive member could walk out on him for at least two weeks, and with every new edition of a newspaper, the place would be packed with customers afraid to take a chance that this might not be the night.
And who would dispute the fact that a supply of bottled beer would be more intriguing than bottled water during such a depressing period.
The demand for membership in such a club would rival the popularity of the old prohibition day speakeasys — what with everyone shouting down the ventilation tubes that “Joe sent me.”
And what a way to put a little life into staid little housing tracts. What city planning commission could deny such an underground commercial bistro in every residential community that demanded such a private enterprise safe guard against the threat of nuclear attack.
A “car for every garage” and a “chicken in every pot” would give way to cries for a “club under every community.” It solves the problem of what to do with the bomb shelters when the bombs aren’t falling. The sub-surface clubs would be the best excuse since golf for drinking away from home.
Wives, who feel they don’t get out enough, would have a perfect excuse to get hubby to take them out to dinner every night. What husband would dare risk an “I told you so,” if he stayed away from the club on the very night he should have treated the little woman to a subterranean soiree.
What with Conelrad reports interspersed between piano bar numbers and waitresses supplying radiations counts with each new round of drinks, the edge would be taken off the fearsome struggle the mad men of the world had perpetrated topside — and the whole idea of just hiding in a hole would be alleviated.
And the money people had already invested in bottled water wouldn’t be wasted. The customers could always bring along their Arrowhead and Sparkletts as a set-up for a round of uncontaminated Jack Daniels on the rocks, even more popular each night.
Metadata
Title | Subject - 3114 |
Collection Name | Spencer Heath Archive |
Series | Subject |
Box number | 19:3031-3184 |
Document number | 3114 |
Date / Year | |
Authors / Creators / Correspondents | |
Description | Newspaper column showing the imagination of Heath’s hostess in Southern California, publicist Frances Norton Manning |
Keywords | Register Kimler Manning |