Bud believes the man on the flyer is his father because the man in the flyer shares his father's name, Herman E. Calloway. Bud also carries a flyer advertising Calloway's jazz band and believes his father might be affiliated with this band.
because the man on the flyer is his father
Bud believes the man in the flyer is his father because he sees a resemblance between himself and the man’s picture, particularly in their facial features. Additionally, the flyer suggests that the man is looking for his son, which gives Bud hope that he might finally find the family connection he's been longing for. This desire for belonging and understanding his roots drives Bud to pursue the man depicted in the flyer.
he imaged that herman e calloway was his father but he was actually bud's grand father
There were multiple conflicts in Bud, Not Buddy. The main one was that Bud wanted to find the man he believed was his father: Herman E. Calloway.
In Chapter 7 of "Bud, Not Buddy," Bud stays the night with a kind family but leaves the next morning to continue his search for his father. He encounters a kind couple in a car who offer him a lift, but Bud starts feeling uneasy and jumps out of the car, continuing on foot. Bud then meets Lefty Lewis, a man who claims to know Bud's father, Herman E. Calloway.
I think the father is trying to give an advice to him.
The earliest man-carrying powered aeroplane was the Wright Flyer.
Might be the neighbors kid bud or maybe the mail man's
The name of the white man in Bud,Not Buddy is Mr.Deeds, Dirty Deeds
It was reputed that her mother had an affair with a man named William Rogers and this was her real father.
They did that so Bud could eat.
Bud' zdorov for a man, or bud' zdorova for a women