


"The pan-thuh." "The poon-thuh." All these kids, seventeen of them, members of the Pump House crowd, are lollygagging around the stairs down to Windansea Beach, La Jolla, California, about 11 a.m., and they all look at the black feet, which are a woman's pair of black street shoes, out of which stick a pair of old veiny white ankles, which lead up like a senile cone to a fudge of tallowy, edematous flesh, her thighs, squeezing out of her bathing suit, with old faded yellow bruises on them, which she probably got from running eight feet to catch a bus or something. This happens to be the cry of a, well, underground society known as the Mac Meda Destruction Company.

So she says it out loud, "The black panther." Somebody farther down the stairs, one of the boys with the major hair and khaki shorts, says, "The black feet of the black panther." "Mee-dah," says another kid. Pam Stacy, 16 years old, a cute girl here in La Jolla, California, with a pair of orange bellbottom hip-huggers on, sits on a step about four steps down the stairway to the beach and she can see a pair of revolting black feet without lifting her head.

Black feet on the crumbling black panther. The Pump House Gang Our boys never hair out. The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe Bibliography Sales Rank: # in Books Published on: Original language: English Number of items: 1 Dimensions: 8.25" h x 5.50" w x 1.00" l, Binding: Paperback 309 pages Download The Pump House Gang.pdf Read Online The Pump House Gang.pdfģ Download and Read Free Online The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe Editorial Review From the Publisher hour cassettes Excerpt. Wolfe here continues his fieldwork among noble savages, from La Jolla to London. Download The Pump House Gang.pdf Read Online The Pump House Gang.pdfĢ The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe Tom Wolfe's second collection (1968) takes it title from a redoubtable surfing elite, many of whom abandoned the beach for the psychedelic indoor sports of the late sixties. 1 The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe The Pump House Gang By Tom Wolfe Tom Wolfe's second collection (1968) takes it title from a redoubtable surfing elite, many of whom abandoned the beach for the psychedelic indoor sports of the late sixties.
