Page 8 THE BATTALION MONDAY, JANUARY 14, 1979 world Larger-than-life bear now an international star United Press International LONDON — Paddington Bear, that furry figure in a duffle coat and surplus had who arrived in England from “darkest Peru” and took his name from a railroad station, just turned 21. But in books he remains 9, the age he’s been since his Aunt Lucy — now spending her twilight years in a home for retired bears in Lima — packed him aboard the train in South America with a handwritten brown tag around his neck saying “Please look after this bear.” Paddington, the most famous member of his species since Presi dent Theodore Roosevelt inspired the Teddy Bear (1902) and A. A. Milne created Winnie-the-Pooh (1926), is part of virtually every Brit ish child’s life. His adventures are chronicled in more than a dozen books and a cartoon television series, and his stuffed, chubby persona peers out from toy counters every where — along with countless Pad dington “spinoffs.” Princess Anne, when she left the hospital with her baby son, Peter, carried a stuffed Paddington under one arm. He also is becoming a celebrity in the United States. Romper Room has just bought the Paddington tele vision series and sales of stuffed Pad- dingtons are booming, along with library and school requests for his books. What makes him so popular? “He’s reliable,” says creator Michael Bond. “He has his paws firmly on the ground. He has a strong sense of right and wrong, in a way that a lot of people would like to have. You can talk to him and know he's not going to pass on your secrets.” The line between Paddington and Bond is, the author acknowledges, loosely drawn. Bond, 53, a genial, silver-haired bear of a man, describes Paddington as, “More what I would like to be than I am. The Browns — with whom Paddington lives — are very much my mother and father. His en vironment is a pre-war, safe one, as I knew it from childhood. He wears those clothes because I was earing a duffle coat and army surplus hat when I started to write about him.” The way Paddington and Bond, a former TV cameraman, first met is another story. “It was Christmas Eve and raining,” Bond said. “I missed the bus and went into a department store for shelter. There was one bear left on the shelf and I felt sorry for it, so I bought it as a stocking stuffer. And because we lived near Padding ton Station, I called it Paddington. And one day I decided to write a story about him.” In little more than two decades, Paddington has grown into an inter national enterprise that brings in $4 million in gross sales annually. Since Paddington has been trans lated into 20 languages. Bond’s cor respondence comes from children — and adults — around the world. Each gets a personal reply, often including a pawprint and line from Paddington who signs himself “Padingtun,” since, being only 9 and a bear, he hasn’t yet mastered spelling. “I write to please myself,” says Bond, who has completed a book ab out a guinea pig named Olga the Pol- ga and will publish one about an armadillo named J. D. Poison who becomes president of the United States. “I don’t write for children and| don’t think about children when fa writing, because I don’t think pi can come up with a composite child to write for anyway.” To a child, Paddington often oven shadows the real world outside his books. Bond said one youngster toldhii he thought it was very funny to name a railway station after a bear. Pollution-plagued Athens plans clean-up Yesterday's a fine billiards establishment NOW OPEN 11:00 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Mon.-Fri. 11:00 a.m.- 1:00 a.m. Sat. 1:00 p.m.-12:00 p.m. Sun. 4421 S. Texas Ave Between Luby's & Chelsea Street House Dress Code United Press International , ATHENS, Greece — Athens goes into the 1980s with a brave new plan designed to save the city from dis astrous overcrowding and pollution. About 3.7 million Greeks, close to 40 percent of the country’s popula tion, live in the capital. Every day some 50 families arrive from the pro vinces or islands, usually to join rela tives already established in the met ropolis. “Our goal is to stem the growth of Athens and stabilize its population at 4.5 million by the end of the cen tury,” said Undersecretary of Public Works Stephanos Manos, who com missioned the scheme. “We have to decentralize by mak ing other cities attractive and by creating sub-centers within the grea ter Athens area. At the moment all services are in the middle of the city and the traffic problem is horren dous.” Three-quarters of Greece’s indus try is concentrated around Athens along with all government offices, 70 percent of doctors and half of the country’s privately-owned cars. Trees, parks and playgrounds make up only 3 percent of the Athens area. Tall apartment blocks tower above narrow streets choked with traffic. A recent survey showed the city is one of the world’s noisiest, threatening the physchological health of Athenians. Under the new plan, vehicles are barred from certain districts, notably the Plaka, the old quarter beneath the Acropolis, and hundreds of new ly-planted trees line the sidewalks. In the spring, giant neon signs will come off buildings along a central boulevard so that passers-by can en joy the splendor of neo-classical architecture. “These are good things, but the plan has to provide more than cosmetic changes, and parts of it are just Utopian,” said Costas Gartzos, an architect and one of 30 Greek city planners who have joined forces to work on the new scheme. “We have to consider people’s basic social needs in housing, recrea tion and waste disposal, and we have to make sure the government under stands.” Pollution control may play a deci sive role in the future of Athens, Gartzos said. There now is so much USDA CHOICE! Owner commits suicide after her celebrity dog dies sulphur dioxide from central heating systems and vehicle exhausts in the air that the marble surface of the Acropolis temples has begun to crumble. Last fall that Caryatids, 2,400-years-old stone maidens from the Erectheum temple, had to be moved into a museum for protection from the atmosphere. In winter a low lying brown smog covers the city, provoking compari sons with Los Angeles. “The smog contains a nasty mix of nitrogen dioxide, hydrocarbons and organic particles, a distinct health hazard, especially for people with bronchial troubles,” said Panayotis Christodoulakis, an environmental scientists. About two-thirds of the city’s sew age flows untreated into the sea, along with its industrial waste, some of it containing cadmium, lead and carcinogenic oils, he said. “The fish have moved out of the Saronic Gulf because there is no ox ygen left to breathe. And swimming in polluted water gives fair-skinned northern tourists skin diseases.” The new plan calls for a British- designed sewage treatment ]_ and strict zoning laws to curb m industry around Athens. A new sub way, costing nearly $1 billion, roads costing $2 billion will handle the traffic problem, the government hopes, although transportation im provements in Athens usually nm into trouble from archaeologists. Athenians themselves will hi defray the cost of rescuing the cits through new taxes on real estate, ser vices and licenses for shops and businesses, now under study. But cynics recall that theonlycily plans ever carried out were Perides’ rebuilding after the 480 B.C. Persian invasion, the Roman Emperor Had rian’s enlargement of the city he admired, and King .Otto of Bavaria! scheme for the capital of newly- independent Greece in the 1830s. “It’s up to the Athenians in the end,” Gartzos said. “They have to react and demand specific improve ments in the quality of their lives if the city is to remain inhabitable.’’ Sides 200-350 lb. Average Hinds 100-180 lb. Average Yield grade 2’s, cut-wrapped and quick frozen. 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Just before Christmas, 14 months after Digby's death, the 46-year-old woman was found dead in her autmo- bile after taking a massive dose of sleeping pills. “It was a very sudden blow, and she took it very badly,” her husband, Norman Harrison, told an inquest Friday. “The dog’s death was a shock and her life changed considerably af terwards.” February eclipse to be studied for effects on Earth United Press International WASHINGTON — A total eclipse of the sun will be visible in parts of Africa and the Indian Ocean Feb. 16, and the federal space agency says it plans to launch seven sounding rock ets to study it. The rockets, to be fired from the San Marco launch platform in the Indian Ocean off Kenya, will study the solar corona while the sun’s disc is blacked out and also will examine changes in Earth’s upper atmos phere during the eclipse. Five of the rockets will carry scien tific instruments provided by Penn sylvania State University and two will carry payloads from the Los Ala mos, N.M., scientific laboratories. The San Marco station will be in- the path of the total eclipse for about 10 minutes. The rockets will be fired before, during and after the clipse. The eclipse’s path will begin off the west coast of Africa during the early morning of Feb. 16 and move in an easterly direction, crossing Zaire, Tanzania and southern Kenya. According to the Yearbook of Astronomy, the path of totality will go across the Arabian Sea and south ern India and end in southern China. 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