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When a Nude Morphed Into an Atom Bomb
by Don Drewniak

We journey back a few decades (maybe centuries) to my having to find an easy elective to fill out courses for the second semester of my junior year in college. I needed it to be easy because the other four courses would require significant amounts of study, and I was working three nights a week from 11 to 7 in a hospital. It was either work or not being able to buy beer and put gas into my ’56 Chevy convertible. No gas, no dates.

After checking with a couple of seniors, I opted for Art Appreciation despite the fact that I had trouble drawing a straight stickman. The reasons? No tests, just a short mid-semester paper critiquing a painting from the local art museum (a different one selected by the professor for each student), and an art project of our choice that was to be completed by the next-to-last class.

The professor, Miss Vertigo (name changed to protect the innocent), was a woman in her late 30s or early 40s who was not blessed with the best of looks and was more than a few pounds overweight. She always wore tight sweaters that accentuated her two main assets.

Once they heard of my course choice and my rationale, my girlfriend (now my wife, Dolores) and my best friend, Charlie, opted to join me.

The painting critique was due on a Monday, roughly halfway through the semester. Armed with a notebook and a pencil, I journeyed to the museum on a Saturday, two days before the due date.

I found the painting on the second floor. It was a landscape without humans or animals. The neuron that once held the image of the painting has apparently escaped from my brain. What I do remember is that the assignment required that we focus on the elements of the painting (color, form, line, shape, space, texture, and value). That’s all that I remember except that whatever I wrote netted a grade of B-.

With that out of the way, I put the thought of the final project out of my mind. Meanwhile, Dolores finished her project, a plaster of a Paris ballet dancer, by the beginning of May. She took dancing lessons starting at an early age and went on to perform in 1965 and 1966 as a summer replacement with the Rockettes at Radio City Music Hall in New York. Marrying her is my only claim to fame.

The weeks passed, and I woke up on a Saturday morning at the beginning of June, having not started the art project. It was due two days later. An ancient God of Pity must have taken notice. As I opened the refrigerator (I lived off-campus), I had a eureka moment as I looked at a two quart cardboard carton of milk.

I bolted down my breakfast and drove to the nearest hardware store, where I bought five packages of wax.

Back at the apartment, I poured the wax into a pot and heated it until it melted. While that was happening, I poured the remaining milk out of the carton, cut off the top, and washed out the interior. I poured the liquified wax into the carton once it had cooled.

Dah-dah!

All that was left was to let the wax harden, peel away the cardboard, and carve out a nude female with my jackknife. What could go wrong?

I quickly discovered what could go wrong after only two minutes of carving, when I realized I had no chance of creating a nude female or anything worthy of even a D-.

Dolores and I were out on a date that night when I had another eureka moment. “Do you have any leftover plaster of Paris?” I asked.

“Yes.”

“Can you mix me a batch tomorrow?”

“Why?”

“I need it for my new art project.”

“You haven’t started it yet?”

“I ran into a minor problem.”

“It took me over a week to make my dancer. You can’t make anything that isn’t junk in part of a day.”

“Wanna bet?”

“Yes,” she said without hesitating. “Two dollars?”

“Five, if you have enough plaster to fill a medium-sized pot.”

“I do.”
We shook hands. I knew that her parents had the other four things I needed: a butcher knife, a red-wax candle, a black-wax candle, and two coat hangers.

I began the next afternoon at her house, with Dolores and her parents watching as I set to work on my revised project. With the block of wax placed on her father’s workbench, I used the butcher knife to slice off a five or six-inch chunk of the wax that had hardened inside the milk container. That was the base.

I then pulled one of the coat hangers apart and jammed the straight end of it as far into the wax as possible. Next, I kept about seven inches of the hanger straight as it projected out of the wax and then twisted the rest of it into a mushroom shape. I wove the second hanger in between the spaces in the “mushroom.”

At this point, none of the three had a clue as to what I was doing. It took me about an hour to press and mold the plaster of Paris over the mushroom. About halfway through the molding, Joe, Dolores’ father, yelled. “It’s an A-bomb!”

Once the plaster hardened, I covered the top of it with melted red and black wax from the candles. My nude female was now an atom bomb.

“You’re not going to bring that monstrosity into class tomorrow, are you?” asked Dolores.

“I most certainly am.”

I purposely walked into class the next day about a minute before the start. A towel covered my priceless atom bomb. Most of the students, including Dolores, were seated. Miss Vertigo was standing behind three six-foot-long tables, on which were about thirty projects. Half, or thereabouts, were paintings. I placed my masterpiece on one of the tables and, with a flourish, removed the towel. I had placed a sticker on the base that read, “Atom Bomb.”

Laughter rolled through the room.

I focused on Miss Vertigo, who was smiling.

So far, so good.

The final class: Miss Vertigo called us up to her desk one at a time and handed each of us a double-folded white sheet of paper. I was the last one to be called up to the desk. As I walked past Charlie, he whispered, “She saved the F for last.”

Returning to my seat, I slowly unfolded the paper. There were three lines of printing: “Project A, Final Grade A-, Please see me after class.”

As the class emptied, I walked up to her desk.

“How did you come up with the idea of your atom bomb?”

I laughed and asked, “Can my grades be changed?”

“No.”

I told her exactly how it came to be.

Holding back laughter, she said, “That is quite the story. Perhaps you can write it up for Reader’s Digest.”

After a few more minutes of small talk, I left the room. Waiting for me was Charlie, who received a B.

“What did she tell you? That you flunked?”

I showed him my grades.

“You must have boffed her.”

“You’ll never know.”

Footnotes: Dolores did not pay the five dollar bet. Shortly after she and I married following our graduation, I placed the atom bomb on top of a table in the living room of our apartment. It disappeared three days later. I theorized that a wealthy art collector paid a second-story thug to steal it.