Naked ladies! ShowMe had crossed the line. The Board lost their minds. The December issue of ShowMe would not be going out until their penalty was decided. Instead, the magazines would sit locked in the ShowMe offices while the Board conferred.
ShowMe held a drunken party at the editor Noel Tomas’ apartment, attended by the journalism students and their friends.
One of those friends was my Dad, Danny. I think he was Noel’s friend, because they were both on the ’52 G.I. bill. Dad — who was drunk — offered to drive Mom back to St. Louis when Christmas break came along.
Mom was particularly sad that the December issue was locked in the offices, because it contained her vicious takedown of the girls at Stephens College.


Mom was sad her article was sitting in a box in the office. (That might have been mitigated by knowing no one would see the imame / inane typo.) But in addition to ShowMe, she had two side hustles. One was writing headlines for the independent student newspaper: The Maneater (Mizzou’s mascot is a tiger). The second job was writing comedy for the semi-satirical version of The Maneater: The Ladies Home Maneater.
The Ladies Home Maneater, or LHM, while humorous, was less edgy than ShowMe. They wrote a lot of parody poems. (On the other hand, the LHM didn’t like Jayne Mansfield’s squeal in Will Success Spoil Rock Hunter which is the BEST PART of the movie.)
LHM had this remarkable recurring column.

Finally, LHM was the paper that reported, in big block letters:
SHOWME IS DEAD.
The Board had decided to shut ShowMe down completely, plus all those December copies sitting in the office had to be destroyed.
Mom has already rescued five copies of the December issue. She offered one to Dad after he drove her home at Christmas, because she liked him even better when he was sober. She was impressed with his ability to drive a stick shift, smoke, and drink a soda all at the same time.
I have always wondered why she had five copies of the December ShowMe. Anyway, that’s the last secret revealed, and almost the last bit of Mom unread.
Of course, she annotated her Dickens. She had the whole set. That’ll need to be a retirement project.











