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The Village Squire, 1981-08, Page 26One Day at a Time I don't want to get involved For years, I've been looking down my nose at people who turn the other way and refuse to get involved when a travesty of justice is in process or when some natural disaster is endangering the welfare of others. I was, of course, appalled when I read the horrid tale years ago of the young New York woman who was murdered in broad daylight while dozens of apathetic apartment -dwellers and passersby looked co with morbid curiosity without raising a hand or a phone to help the unfortunate victim. That was the first such awful incident to anger my idealistic senses and since then, I have kept a keen eye on the newspapers for all similar disgusting examples of human coldness in the face of tragedy. And I guess I really believe that had I been on that New York street when that young lady was being stabbed to death, I would have acted in a much different manner than the callous people who just stood there and let her die while she cried out desperately for help. But like most other great theories, I've never had the opportunity to put that one to the test so I have remained quite comfortable in the certain knowledge that I would act the Good Samaritan if the opportunity ever arose. Well, last Thursday night I finally got my big chance and 1 am now in the process of trying to figure out what went wrong. It was my own fault, I suppose, for going into such a sleazy tavern but I liked the band that was playing there and didn't think any harm could come from a couple of hours of sitting and listening. Two young ladies accompanied me and we sat at a little table near the door. All went well until about 20 minutes before the bar closed for the night. A huge. muscle-bound man. obviously drunk and more obviously in a very belligerent frame of mind, staggered into the tavern and started beating his chest. The drunk was apparently well-known in that establishment and not very well -liked. A small, neatly -dressed man, immediately rushed over to where Tarzan was yelling out his war cry, grabbed him and tried to hustle him out the door. A Jim Hagarty is a freelance journalist and /armor rc7rortc'r/or the Stratford Beacon Herald. Responses to his columns ruur he /orwarded either to the Villa e .Squire ,Ire Box 456. Mitchell. by Jim Hagarty waitress and a bartender also arrived on the scene to help their boss eject the troublemaker. The Incredible Hulk did not appreciate the attempts to have him removed and with arms and hands as powerful as any I've seen, he grabbed the little hotel - owner by the sides of his head and began squeezing it and banging the poor chap's noggin against a cigarette machine. The unfortunate owner was in agony and, 1 surmised, in grave danger. Prompted by years of serious moral- izing on the issue of apathy and genuinely sympathetic to the plight of the man who was being brutalized, I put my common sense in my back pocket, jumped to my feet and rushed to the rescue, ignoring the pleas of my two female friends who wanted me to stay uninvolved. When I reached the drunken monster, he had succeeded in scaring off the owner, the waitress and the bartender and was hungrily looking around for someone else to chew on. His angry eyes landed on me and he roared in rage, obviously upset that a bystander who had no interest in the matter would have the nerve to become involved. He broke away from his pursuers and lunged at me. After a big meal, I weigh 155 pounds and on my tip -toes, I stand about 5 feet, 9 inches. I've been in three fights in my life and lost all three. But for five years in high school, I was a member of the cross-country team and boy, can I run. And to the amusement of the hotel crowd gathered in that sleazy bar that night, run is what I did. I got away from him and made it back to my table and the two girls who by now were very fearful for my safety. But they were not half as afraid as I was. Fortunately, the masher must have been literally blind -drunk because he couldn't pick me out of the crowd, though he tried hard. Standing five feet away from our table, he looked out over the patrons and roared, over and over, "Where is he?" Still searching for me and promising, "I'll kill him!", Muhammad Ali wander- ed away from the front door and that is when my friends and I took off. We didn't stop running until we reached my car and just as we got safely inside, the drunk staggered out the front door and looked around menacingly. As the saying goes, "I'd rather be a live chicken than a dead duck." And now I have an inkling of why people don't get involved. Bayfield Country Fair 125th Year August 28th and 29th Special Attractions: Heavy horses Poultry 4-H Calf Club Crafts Flowers Vegetables Fruit Baking Sewing Exhibits Friday, August 28th Bingo, 7:30 p.m. Saturday, August 29th Parade, 12:30 p.m. Log Sawing Nall Driving Horseshoe Pitching Jumping Jack and Fishpond for the children Saturday 's admission ticket of $1.00 good for draw on $50.00 cash. Protect your skin with sun products from ELLEN BETRIX Sun protection sticks, water repelling sun jellies, sun creams for sensitive skins Also for the summer Eyelash tinting, new make up colours for summer, hair removal with organic wax. acheS 'n Creatil CAROL GOWING SKIN CARE STUDIO 32 Newgate St., Goderich 524-4403 Open Tuesday thru Saturday VILLAGE SQUIRE/AUGUST 1981 PG. 25