August 31, 2011

How to Survive, with Equanimity, a Dog's Puppyhood, by John Bolinger


There comes a time during the first few weeks of having a puppy that the owner may consider calling an exorcist instead of a vet. The energy of the pup seems infinitely wild, and wearing him out in hopes of a quiet nap (mostly for yourself) often seems futile. My West Highland White Terrorist (Oops! Terrier) pup Dudley was eleven weeks old, and my ego sometimes suffered from not always being able to keep one step ahead of him. It hurt to be outsmarted by a puppy, who seemed during his rare quiet moments always to be plotting his next campaign. It was almost as though I could hear the voice in his little head saying, "Well now, I haven't tried chewing on that leather chair. Nor Have I chewed up any more paperback books since I began teething on John's copy of GOOD DOG, BAD DOG. Let's see. How about that feather pillow on the sofa? Yum!"

Of course, terriers (i.e. Westies, Scotties, Cairns, etc.) are generally more highly strung than other dogs, and their "attitude" is something that provides hard work for the owner during training but rewards him later when the dog is more mature. You see, I've been through this before, but my memory failed to retain the fact that my last Westie pup experience (with Cody) was in 1995 when I was almost fifteen years younger.

To all those of you who are training a pup, I have some advice. The puppy needs lots of exercise as well as lots of rest, but you can decrease your own part in the exertion of running around the back yard like a chicken with its head cut off. There are two methods, which I discovered by accident only this past week. First, if you have a ceramic, linoleum, or tile floor with lots of space, give your pup an ice cube. He will, with some difficulty, chase it around the room until he or the ice cube simply melts or until the dog is exhausted. Again, this should in no way be considered a dirty trick on your part (well, OK, maybe a little one), but rather a way to conserve your energy while giving your pup his much needed exercise.

The other method of helping your pup to expend more of his own energy instead of the last remnants of yours is to give him a tennis ball. This one seems obvious, and I'm a little embarrassed to admit that I had not even thought of it until Duds was eleven weeks old, when I bought two tennis balls. You veteran dog trainers are probably snickering at my lack of know-how in this area, but I was completely thrilled to see that Duds went crazy with pleasure in chasing the balls around the sun room for almost half an hour. He never figured out that the balls didn't actually have wills of their own, but the fact the they didn't stay in place meant that he had to dash around the room trying to out-maneuver them, because they refused to stand still. Was that perfect or WHAT?

All this I observed from the comfort of my favorite chair until, at last, Duds went to his preferred nap spot and used a stack of New York Times crossword books as his pillow. I'll include a photo of that very pleasant aftermath and remembering those active puppy days, plan a little nap for myself.

August 30, 2011

What to do if your dog swallows a squeaker, and other dog stories

 My story first, then John's:

   A few weeks ago, my dog Scout, an 8 year old 20-pound bichon poodle, (a politically-correct rescue, I might add) swallowed a dog toy squeaker. I'm an overprotective, hysterical type...anxiously called Friendship, Washington, DC's vet ER....The only thing that kept me from rushing him to animal hospital was that it was late at night, I have no car, and would have had to call a taxi that would take pets; in a stormy night, getting the taxi would have taken hours. The Vet ER doc instructed to be calm, not bring him in, stop crying, and watch Scout for same symptoms that one would watch for in a human, for a G-I Tract obstruction: nausea, vomit, no stools, abdominal discomfort, loss of appetite, less active... Nevertheless, the next day, I took the frisky, happy Scout to our regular vet. Even though he was fine, our vet xrayed Scout 4 times, in 3 days, for more than $450...

  For a 20-pound dog, it can take about 3 days, for a squeaker to pass through the G-I Tract. I learned to be patient, observant, and yes, gross, paw through his stools. Scout had passed the squeaker, and I missed it, despite my vigilance in scooping his poop. I also learned from the Vet ER that every dog will swallow something he shouldn't at least once, despite how vigilant the dog's human companions are... What to do next time: observe, and wait.


  Annie.... , on to John's story. His dog is the white dog, at right...

Remembering When Dudley Was a Pup

Only a dog lover, who has endured the sleepless nights of a puppy in his crate whining into the wee hours, as though he were trapped on Alcatraz (the puppy that is), can appreciate the rigors of turning an uncouth little canine into a civilized adult.

My Westie pup Dudley was nine weeks old, fast as lightning, and smart enough to handle the honors curriculum of most elementary schools. He figured everything out almost instantly and resided for a while in the heated sun room, where his crate was and where he was free to roam the ceramic floored space when I was with him during the day, making sure that he didn't chew on electrical cords, wood items (splinters) or anything else the ingestion of which would harm him.

In fact,  Duds flew around the room, flinging toys so that he could chase them and arrange them into a pile, and I had already left my computer chair many times to monitor his cute savagery regarding the morning newspaper, a paperback book, a basket of logs for the fireplace, and the corner of a wicker table. He was a white blur of energy that seemed impossibly housed by a three-pound creature. There were times when he appeared to be going in more than one direction at the same time.

Using inkless newsprint paper, I taught Dudley to transfer his use of the paper to the dog run next to the sun room. When he did his business correctly, I praised him generously, even if it meant waiting in the cold morning air until it felt as though Christmas must be near.

The first morning he actually made a solid deposit and then a liquid one outside, I felt like Annie Sullivan having taught Helen Keller the key to language. It was a stellar moment worthy of a journal entry and a photo! I was so excited that I could even imagine that little Tootsie Roll-shaped item on the cover of a triumphant book. I'm fairly certain that my neighbor, seeing me over her fence gesticulate my joy, thought that any remnants of my sanity had flown completely away. This, however, is the stuff of dog training, and it separates us puppy owners from saner folk, though new parents come to mind with their myriad photos of tiny children doing things for which Mom and Dad believe Merit Scholarships are in order.

When Dudley arrived here that day two years ago (after my having driven over sixteen hundred miles to Tipton, Iowa and back to get him), I was willing to retrieve toys for him to make sure he was properly occupied, chewing on stuffed monkeys instead of my books. I then sank to a lower level, one that entailed a bit of guilt. Having reached a state of semi- exhaustion, I began sitting in the sun room rocker and throwing a pile of stuffed toys one at a time, some of them on strings, so that Duds had to do all the work, enough at least to wear him out to the point that he needed a nap, which in turn allowed me one too. Anyone who believes this is a dirty trick on my part has never owned a puppy and trained it with any seriousness.

To all those wonderful, dedicated, and slightly batty people out there who are training pups, have done it, or who are considering the surrender of a good part of their reason in order to do it, I say God bless you! My thoughts are with you on your journey to whatever sense of fulfillment comes from this endeavor. But I ask you also to look at your puppy when he's asleep, peaceful and quietly content, and remember again why having a wonderful dog is such an amazing gift. It is all worth it.

August 29, 2011

An Indiana Math Teacher's Homage to Edward Gorey



John's friend Karen, a multi-talented northwest Indiana math teacher -- high school by day, university-level math by night, loves Edward Gorey's art so much, that she created Gorey-esque garden decorations. 

A few years ago, Karen, never one for less-is-more, decided to make Gorey-inspired Halloween decorations. The results, at left, are life-size Gorey-inspired figures, gorgeous, inspiring, sought-after, appreciated, that she puts up in her gardens and her yards, for any celebratory occasions.

Karen drew life-size figures on 3/4 inch plywood, cut them out with a jigsaw herself, and then painted them with acrylic paints, covered with water-resistant enamel.  Both sides are painted; they are held up, with ordinary garden stakes. Karen is skilled at dry wall, plumbing, and carpentry.  Karen even designed and built a fireplace mantel and wainscoting for her dining room!

John describes Chicago born and raised Gorey, who died in 2000, as an artist who did bizarre drawings of Victorian and Edwardian people in luxurious if decaying settings like drawing rooms, where children might be swallowed up by elaborately stuffed settees or potted ferns, that sort of thing.  His drawings are generally part sinister and part charming drawings, that depict worlds of afternoon tea and formal occasions among aristocratic and aloof people. Gorey's children's books were my son's favorite, even though, it is widely known, that Gorey disliked children.

John's in the photo at top left... The Gorey figures are kind of Tim Burton-ish, no?

Annie....

August 28, 2011

A Letter to New Teachers by John Bolinger

I was just remembering in some detail about the autumn that I decided to retire.  The decision came all at once, it seemed.

I taught in a junior college for several years at night but also taught full time for thirty-five years in a local high school.  I taught English and French.  Those years were rich in the experience of being with people, and having taught over seven thousand students, I can now say that they were very wonderful years, years that kept me young in spirit.  I helped to write the curriculum for freshmen and for seniors in language arts, designed the Creative Writing program and took my students of French to France.  That part of my life is filled with hundreds of stories that are beautiful, sad, humorous and quite touching.  I was in room 242 most of those years, a room on the second floor facing the football field to the south.  It was like a big terrarium, hot in spring and fall and frigid in winter...but a good portion of my heart will always remain there.  My identity during all that time was that of a teacher.  That was who I was when people asked what I did.  I have stayed in contact with many of the students I had over all those years and had many whose parents I also had taught.  The sense of community that afforded gave me a feeling of continuity and stablility in a career in which most people don’t last more than five years anymore.  I had excellent classes for the most part.  The fall of 2003 I tackled a special English class of problem students.  It was a freshman class with people who had behavioral problems, including past expulsions.  This is the one story I must tell to help new teachers understand the meaning of all those years to me.  It is a kind of microcosm that speaks of my love and respect for the profession.  It will help to know me better and perhaps to undertand better what teaching gives back.

It was a remarkable day in late September.  Every day is remarkable in its own way, but I was touched by something unexpected during my last class of the day.  Because it was Friday afternoon and the end of the school day with my most difficult class (the leather-jacket juvenile delinquent crowd I have already mentioned), I was feeling sorry for myself, thinking as I watched them taking their Friday vocabulary test that I was not really reaching them as I had hoped to do.  I saw my refelction in a big mirror that I used to keep tabs on everything that went on in the room even when my back was turned. My face looked sad. Though the rest of the day had been very successful and most enjoyable in my other classes, I was focusing once again on what I felt was a failure on my part to inspire everyone in the room and have them excited about what we were going to be doing after the test.  Then there was a knock on the door, and a messenger from the main office delivered a package to me that had just arrived.  My students were distracted by the interruption (always an arduous task to get them back on track after ANY distraction, even a sneeze).  One bold kid in the front row (the one who was proud that his brother was in prison for armed robbery) asked who it was from and what it was. 

I read the return address and said that the package was from a former Morton student from many years ago (thirty-four to be exact).  One kid joked that it might be a bomb, but I replied that I was going to open it anyway and that we would all go up together...like bottle rockets.

Their curiosity was aroused by now, and excuses for distraction aside, they were genuinely interested to know the contents.  I opened the box to find a five-page letter from that former student , who was a trucker for twenty-five years before opening his own mortuary near Stanford University.  He had been in a “problem” class just like the one I was teaching that hour...a “basic skills” English class.  We corresponded over all those intervening years, and he continued to send me news about his life, including, at last, pictures of his grand children.

He wrote a book about his travels as a trucker across America.  He worked for several months after 9/11 at Ground Zero clearing debris and corpses. He worked with the New York city Fire Department and Police Department as head coroner. In the box was the cap he wore during his work there.  It was covered with dirt and badges for his valor.  it was the thing of which he was most proud.  The letter said that I had always been his favorite teacher and that he still thought of the ways I had inspired him to be his best even though he was now fifty-one years old.  He wanted me to have the cap, because he was proud of it, and I was his hero in a time when the world was calling him a hero.

My eyes filled up as I looked at it and explained to the class what it was.  They were absolutely silent (perhaps the first time they had ever seen a teacher cry).  The bell rang and they left quietly (as they had never done before).  Maybe they too were touched by what had occurred.  I don’t know.  It may be that they were simply shocked by my reaction.  It didn’t matter.  I had not been so moved in a long time by a gesture like that gift.  It came at just the right time to let me know that teaching had indeed made a difference and that there were influences that continued long after students were gone.  I felt quite blessed.

I’ll post a photo of the cap later.  The smudges of dirt probably won’t show up, but it will be added to my collection of teaching memorabilia.  By the way, Jim had heart surgery two weeks after he sent me the cap and died October 23, 2003.  I retired the following spring.

August 27, 2011

Aunt Reba's Red Cucumber Pickle Recipe

This recipe is much easier, than it sounds.  Most pickling ingredients, including jars, can be found in grocery stores.

Large cucumbers, peeled, sliced into rings and cored.  They may also be sliced into spears if you prefer.

Soak 24 hours in the following mixture:

2 cups lime or Ball Picle Crisp Granules in maker's proportion to lime
8 1/2 quarts water

This recipe will do about 2 gallons of sliced cukes.

Drain and wash well, being careful not to break the pieces.

Simmer two hours in the following mixture:

1 cup vinegar (apple cider works)
2 oz. red food coloring
1 tbsp. alum
enough water to cover the cukes

Drain well and throw away the liquid.  Rinse the cukes.

While the cukes are simmering, make the following syrup:

2 cups vinegar
2 cups water
10 cups sugar
6 broken cinnamon sticks (cinnamon bark)
1 pkg red hot cinnamon candy

Cook until the sugar and candy are melted and mixture is boiling.  Pour over the drained cukes.  Let set overnight.

Drain - reserving syrup.  Reheat the liquid, pack cukes into jars and fill with hot liquid.

Seal and process 10 minutes in hot water bath.

Charles Tidler: Hoosier-Bred Playwright and Poet

...Musings about an old acquaintance…Charles Tidler... is a Canadian poet and playwright, who grew up in Tipton Indiana, attended Sharpsville High School, and graduated from Purdue in 1968; with 11 plays, produced all over Canada, tons of awards, he is hailed as one of Canada’s most original poet-playwrights.

When I was at Purdue, he had graduated, hung around campus, an arrogant arse, holding forth about writing, philosophy, bewitching us like Scheherazade, waiting re: Viet Nam War.  He produced an 'underground' lit mag, Wordjock, did off-campus poetry readings, smoked a lot of weed, and other stuff, and dated beautiful women, including Carol Ewing, a blond sorority girl, from Marion, Indiana, friend of my friend CeCe, a seemingly mismatched duo.

During Christmas break 1969, Charles borrowed my off-campus apartment, when I went home,… his last stop en route to Canada, to escape draft. When I returned from break, a day early, and found his open suitcase filled with my books, like my beloved Letters to a Young Poet, by Rilke, I was livid!  I vividly recall Carol trying to calm me down, “Now, now, Charles didn’t mean it.  He needs the books: he’s going to be a famous poet.” We naïve Purdue girls, like rock-musician groupies, believed that artistes were allowed to do things, like steal from each other, both possessions, and their creative ideas, writing fragments, for the good of art, which was for the betterment of society.  But-t-t- …my books, bought by hard-earned money, babysitting (bratty, precocious) professors’ kids, and cleaning their houses!  I never forgave Charles Tidler, for not regarding me.  I think I was also self-righteously annoyed that he escaped to Canada, to avoid the Viet Nam war, but never involved himself with campus anti-war protests, meetings, groups.

Carol followed Charles to Canada, probably an extreme act of Purdue rebellion, that shocked many, and I heard, estranged her from her parents.  In the mid-1970s, my friend CeCe, Carol’s friend, said that she had heard from her… that she and Charles were so poor, that they ate seaweed, found on the beach, and had to live on Vancouver, BC beaches, for awhile, and that they had a baby son. Always wondered if the marriage lasted, if Carol returned, to the US, what the baby grew up to be.

In May, at a student poetry-and-jazz performance I attended, here in DC, Charles Tidler’s poetry was performed, a kind of talking-jazz-blues-fun piece… Astounded to find that it was indeed THE Hoosier Charles Tidler, the Purdue University bad-boy! Although he is not well-known here, he is considered, in literary circles, to be one of Canada’s most original and best…

I found an April 2011 Lafayette Journal-Courier article by Tim Brouk, about Charles Tidler, re: his latest book, Hard Hed -- The Hoosier Chapman Papers, in which he wrote about Purdue and West Lafayette.  (http://www.jconline.com/article/20110819/ENT15/108190306/Take-5-Charles-Tidler)...

In the article, he stated that as a young man, he couldn’t get out of Indiana fast enough, but,  “as an adult -- a senior citizen now -- I keep coming back. All my books say "I'm a Hoosier in Canada." Even a rolling stone has roots somewhere.” I feel the same way…but I still don’t have the courage to go back to Indiana… Charles told the interviewer, that he loved Indiana’s blood-soaked history, enigmas, contradictions, the people, which he called the friendliest in North America. Carol is no longer Charles' wife, but no mention of wife, or family, in his article. He is married, has two sons, lives in Victoria, BC.

I requested Hard Hed, from DC Public Library; will review, when I get the book. I would never spend money on any of his books.  Am not convinced that poets and playwrights, who, at 21, are thoughtless egomaniacs, improve  that much. Nevertheless, I admire him, for putting in the hard work, sticking to it, despite countless rejection letters (I'm picturing my bathroom wall that I wallpaperd with rejection letters, before I quit.)

--Annie

Below is a list of works, by Charles Tidler, Indiana writer.

PLAYS & BOOKS, by Charles Tidler, most of which are available on Amazon:

Hard Hed: The Hoosier Chapman Papers (Anvil 2011) 978-1-897535-69-1 $20
Tortoise Boy: A Chamber Play (Anvil, 2008) - play
Going to New Orleans (Anvil, 2001) - novel
Red Mango: a blues (Anvil, 2001)
The Sex Change Artist, Intrepid Theatre. Playwrights Union of Canada.
Fabulous Yellow Roman Candle. Playwrights Union of Canada.
The Butcher's Apron. Playwrights Union of Canada.
Spit Delaney's Island, Adaptation of two stories by Jack Hodgins. Playwrights Union of Canada.
The Farewell Heart. Playwrights Union of Canada.
Straight Ahead. Playwrights Union of Canada.
Blind Dancers. Playwrights Union of Canada.
Dinosaurs. Powell River: Ramseed House Press, 1982.
Straight Ahead & Blind Dancers. PLCN, 1981; CTR No. 34, Spring 1982.
Broken Branches. Vancouver: Orphan Press, 1977.
Anonymous Stone. Pulp Press, 1977.
Flight: The Last American Poem. Pulp Press, 1976.
Whetstone Almanac. Pulp Press, 1975.
Straw Things. New York: The Crossing Press, 1972.
North of Indianapolis. Indiana: Aesop's Feast Press, 1969.

August 25, 2011

John's Aunt Mabel's Pear Mold, Circa Indiana, mid 1960s

If you're hankering for a 1960s jello dessert comfort food, as you batten down the hatches, for Hurricane Irene, John's Aunt Mabel's Pear Mold hits the spot.  See recipe below.
                               Annie


CRUSHED PEAR JELLO MOLD

1 regular size package lime jello
1 8 oz. pkg. Philadelphia cream cheese
1/2 pint whipping cream or Cool Whip
1 large can pears
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Drain the pears, saving juice.
Boil juice and dissolve jello in it.Chill, but don’t set --about 1 hour in refrig.
Mash pears and cream cheese together.
Add thickened, but not set jello mixture.
Fold whipped cream into this mixture.

Pour into pan or mold and refrigerate until firm.


--From Aunt Mabel's recipe collection, 1965

The Accidental Adventures of Young Shakespeare, by Indiana writer Conn McAuliffe

In 2010, the late Conn McAuliffe, Indiana writer, educator, and textbook writer, published a hefty 788-page novel on the young Shakespeare, a fast, fun, and imaginitive read, mostly in dialog, between the young Shakespeare and a character named Malachi. I'm still reading it... learning a lot of history....


Catch a glimpse on YouTube: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=smZE0fbaqHo


This is a good adjunct, to the study of Shakespeare. I would highly recommend this, as a good resource, for any educator, re: background info, for lectures, and materials, for lectures... This book is an entertaining way of presenting the political, religious, and sociological history of the era. For young readers, who can't get into iambic pentameter, rhyming couplets, blank verse, chapters of this big work, could hook the young reader, ... gently.


The lovely cover artwork, and design, was the work of Conn's nephew Luke McAuliffe.


Here's the Amazon product description:

Product Description

MUCH ADO ABOUT A MYSTERY...


What happened to the real William Shakespeare in his twenties? How did a rustic lad disappear from historical records in 1585 and burst into view on London’s stage eight years later transformed into a playwright sophisticated in the complexities of political, social and romantic intrigue?


This wildly imaginative yarn with a strong historical flavor follows young Will on tantalizing and comedic adventures with spies and scholars, a plot to kill a queen, treachery in foreign lands, poetic interludes, battles at sea, encounters with great minds, and the carnal, bloody and unnatural acts Horatio later speaks of in “Hamlet.”


In pursuing their secret duties, William and his mentor, Malachi, trade quips and quotes with a wide range of their contemporaries from Marlowe to Montaigne, Spenser to Cervantes. Their spirited and humorous exchanges from the back alleys and battlefronts often preview lines we will hear later in the work of the mature Shakespeare.


One reviewer comments: "What a roller-coaster....spies, intrigue, torture, duels, queens, cannons, fighting sail & romance...but above all....HUMOR (prepare to be amused)...history as it could have (might have?) should have been!"


Blend the brash exuberance of “Shakespeare in Love” with the wise innocence of “Forrest Gump” and you’ll easily recognize irreverent young William as you join our players in a scene already in progress...


buy on Amazon; paper $29.95; Kindle $9.99
http://www.amazon.com/Accidental-Adventures-Young-Shakespeare-ebook/dp/B003UHVTG4/ref=sr_1_2?ie=UTF8&qid=1314297240&sr=8-2

Annie

August 23, 2011

Another Installment From's John's Memoir, on Freshman Year

From Tom Brokaw's Boom: 

"If you thought something good came out of the Sixties, you're probably a Democrat; if you thought the Sixties were bad, you are probably a Republican." 
-- Former President Bill Clinton
Thought you might enjoy reading another installment from John's book, Come on Fluffy, This Ain't No Ballet, to help soothe any raw nerves, from today's east coast earth quake. Is anyone curious about Fluffy? Don't you want to know about him?  Get the Kindle version from Amazon.

Annie


                                                                                        Chapter 10 Politics, Algebra, and Gossip

The presidential election of 1960 was the first of which I had much awareness. When Eisenhower was elected in the early 1950’s, I was only six years old. At home in 1960 my family and I watched the Kennedy/Nixon debates on our black and white television set, and I remember only that something about Richard Nixon didn’t ring true to me, because everything he said sounded prepared or even memorized. 

My Aunt Hazel and Uncle Walter, staunch Republicans, paid me five dollars to wear a Nixon campaign button to school for a whole week, and as a fourteen-year-old, I thought five bucks was a huge amount of money. However, I wore the button to school only once, as it seemed every other kid wearing a button wore one for JFK. When cute Shirley Bodner offered to give me a JFK button, I immediately put the Nixon one into my back pocket in order to fit in better with my peers. 



None of this had anything to do with actual politics. Once again it was all about image. Jack Kennedy seemed younger , more confident ,and more articulate than Richard Nixon, who appeared to represent more of the same old thing from Ike’s eight years as President. Change meant some excitement, and to us fourteen-year-olds, that was a good thing. 

Not wanting to disappoint Aunt Hazel and Uncle Walter by revealing my betrayal of the Republicans, I continued to wear my Nixon button whenever I was around them. Despite feeling two-faced about the whole thing, I never returned the five dollars. That decision was based upon the rationalization that if my aunt and uncle were prepared to bribe a future voter or attempt to buy votes for Nixon, they were as guilty of political graft and corruption as I was of being a freshman hypocrite. As it turned out, I spent all five dollars over a period of two weeks on sodas at the Walgreens on Hohman Avenue in downtown Hammond. Guilt did follow me, however. When Nixon lost the election, I felt personally responsible, as though my not wearing his stupid campaign button had made him lose. Sodas after that election never again tasted as good.

The Kennedys made me feel proud to be an American. Their taste, style, elegance, eloquence, and beauty were lavish in the media, and no one could ever forget January, 1961 on that very sunny but bone-cracking, cold day watching the inaugural speech in black and white and hearing those immortal words, “Ask not what your country can do for you. Ask what you can do for your country.” 

Despite the cold day and the cold war with the Soviet Union, I felt happy that the President and his beautiful and accomplished wife, Jacqueline, represented us on the world stage where, by contrast, Premier and Mrs. Khrushchev looked like Mr. and Mrs. Potato Head. By the spring of 1961 even the Sears catalog had pill-box hats, Chanel-like suits for women, and sheath dresses. Girls at school were already copying Jackie’s daytime bouffant hairstyle. The problem was that some girls copied Jackie’s evening formal do with hair piled high in elegant but inappropriate swirls that didn’t really go with pleated plaid wool skirts the girls wore to school or the white tennis shoes with white anklets. The result over the next two years was that hairdos for girls became quite large, so that some, like Wanda Jenkins and Judy Sabo looked top-heavy, and wearing those tiny bows in front made it look as though the whole giant wad of hair was being held in place by the miniscule piece of ribbon, which might give way at any moment so that all that hair might just give way to fill the room with the ratted thatch.

I also felt proud, because of the Kennedys, to be of Irish descent on my mother’s side. Despite Joseph Kennedy’s shady amorous and business dealings going back to the 1920’s, the Kennedy family did become the closest thing America had to royalty. My Irish connection, remote as it may have been, somehow made me and my Irish friends and relatives feel a little closer to Hyannis Port and Martha’s Vineyard, and even the White House. I knew nothing yet of Vietnam, and the Cuban Missile Crisis was a year down the road. Life was good.

As an aging baby boomer, if I ever feel elderly and begin to regret my lost youth, all I need do is to remember algebra class. It all looked like Egyptian hieroglyphs to me. Everything about algebra mystified me, and I never cared a rat’s behind what the unknown was. In fact, algebra itself was for me the great unknown, a vast and incomprehensible experience that no painting by Hieronymous Bosch could ever capture. Nightmares came to me often of a big black, masked “X” pursuing me to demand I correctly identify it. Being in algebra class was like being the victim in Poe’s story, “The Pit and the Pendulum.” 

I lived in absolute terror of being called on in class for fear of my blithering answers becoming new fodder for class gossip. I never actually cut class in terms of going to Dairy Queen instead, but I did fake illness a couple of times to avoid quizzes. Factoring, graphs, bell curves, and all those unknowns chewed my brain cells to nothing. Mr. Graham, our teacher, was sympathetic only in his complete lack of awareness that anyone could not see how easy and full of fun algebra was. Almost everything he said seemed an absolutely foreign language to me. 

The meaningless squawks of teachers in Charlie Brown cartoons express perfectly the way I felt in that classroom. Poor Mr. Graham wanted so much for me to understand, and he tried everything short of sign language to help make things clear to me. Even his tutoring me after school came pretty much to nothing, due partly to the distractions of his very thick eyeglasses, which any boy scout would have coveted for starting fires in the wild, and his herringbone tweed jacket, which contained more chalk dust than the White Cliffs of Dover. Whenever he moved his arm to make a gesture or write on the black board, white clouds would billow up from previous months of chalk usage that somehow became stored in the fibers of that frightening sport coat. It seemed hopeless that either of us would ever enjoy any success on the conveying or absorbing end of algebra. I was his Helen Keller, and he was my Annie Sullivan, except that in our case, I remained deaf, blind, and mute without anything ever clicking in my head to help open my brain to what he saw as the vast and endless joys of algebra.

There were, in fact, only two things that helped to make algebra class endurable. I sat in the back of the room, and Brenda Sanders was to my right. Algebra was child’s play to her, which for a while made me suspect that she was some kind of extraterrestrial creature merely posing as a freshman at Gavit High. She was, however, lots of fun and would often try to explain to me our algebra homework. 

Some days Brenda would bring a candy bar to class and split it with me on condition that I play “Camptown Races” on the rubber band of my retainer, which when plucked, made a sound like a Jew’s harp so that changing the shape of my lips in larger or smaller circles, I could use a real musical scale. On a really good day I could even manage “Oh, Susanna.” 

In spite of my efforts to play the songs “pianissimo,” Mr. Graham would sometimes hear me or hear Brenda, who regardless of her terrifying skill at solving algebraic equations, had no control when it came to keeping her laughter inaudible. Mr. Graham had already warned me twice and used his favorite classroom expression, “Three strikes, and you’re out.” I mean, we did make an effort to keep things as quiet as we could. Brenda had even stopped bringing PayDay candy bars, because the crunch of the peanuts made too much noise. She switched to the silent alternative of Three Muskateers bars. The double-edged sword of having Brenda there was that she was certainly entertaining, but she made the experience of algebra worse by making me feel like a dunce in math class sitting next to Isaac Newton.

My final performance of “Camptown Races” was given in the spring of 1961, when only several notes into my rendition of the song, Mr. Graham broke a piece of chalk in anger as he was attempting to write a new equation on the board. There was a long line drawn hysterically that stopped right where the chalk had broken when he heard the music, whirled around, and confronted me about the rude interruption. Brenda was of no help whatsoever. She actually fell out of her seat laughing uncontrollably, but as usual, she was not a suspect in this behavioral breach. She was brilliant and would eventually be the class valedictorian, so any possibility that she could be the instigator in this travesty of manners was never even considered. She was also smart enough to wipe the smears of chocolate from her lips. I was not. The result was that I was caught playing a song on my braces with a piece of melting chocolate candy bar in my hand, for which I was sent to the principal’s office and assigned two early-morning detentions. The candy bars continued, but I never played my “Jew’s harp” retainer again.

The only other thing that brought life and interest to algebra class was the gossip about amorous adventures and misadventures of classmates. Though I myself never had any such news to contribute , I was an enthusiastic listener, who drank in every sensational, even if fictitious detail. There was, for example, always some juicy tidbit about Barbara Fredericks, who was distinguished by her enormous ratted hairdo that was consistently punctuated by a tiny black silk bow dropped in the front center of the great hammock of hair, where eagles were said to have nested. Barb was further set apart by her very ruddy complexion, which displayed what could have been skin made raw from being dragged over chenille bed spreads all night long. She had, in fact, a panting sexual energy that made it impossible for anyone talking to her not to wonder what Barb had been doing the night before. 

And don’t think that these little gossip sessions were only for the girls. Boys leaned over desk tops like veteran contortionists to get their share of the “news.” Every item seemed to have earth-shattering significance to us, worthy at least of front-page coverage by THE NEW YORK TIMES. Boys gossiped too, especially about girls in our class and how it was possible, according to Bruce Mason, to tell which girls had buns in the oven by the way they walked, and that walks could also reveal who was actually still a virgin. Stud status seemed excessively important to some guys, who in the locker room would brag about conquests that even I knew were as likely to have happened as my getting an “A+” in algebra, but I never contradicted their stories, because refuting the sexual exploit stories of a teenage guy with a frail ego is very dangerous business.

Then there was Barney Blue, a sixteen-year-old kid who looked twenty-five and was in our freshman class with his muscular physique, five-o’clock shadow, and deep tan, as though he had just returned from some tropical island. He had one of those severe crew cuts with a perfectly flat top that anyone could easily have used as a tea tray or a desk. In addition to his height of well over six feet, Barney had straight, black eyebrows that merged over the bridge of his ample nose to make them look like a single menacing eyebrow, unyielding and very angry. I honestly don’t know anyone who ever heard Barney speak, but his total silence only added to the mystery of his personality (if he had one) and his dark, mysterious past. There was almost always a new story about how he had made another girl pregnant, and according to class legend, he had populated little towns in the Midwest with the many bastards he had already fathered. OK, THE NATIONAL ENQUIRER had nothing on us for stories that could not really be substantiated, but Barney Blue became the great enigma of our class, even though he never graduated.

He sat next to me in English class, and the only time I ever saw him smile was the day our teacher, Mr. Warren, asked me, during a vocabulary lesson to use the word “feat” in a sentence. My naive and incomplete response was, “Jimmy was very proud of his feat.” Others in the class laughed as I realized the ineptitude of my answer, but Barney just smiled broadly as he continued to look down at the top of his desk. No teacher I know of ever pressed Barney into an actual oral response in class. One day Mr. Warren asked Barney a question, but Barney merely shrugged his shoulders, his face showing no expression at all, and that was that. He was just scary to observe. In gym class one day, before our teacher, Mr. Smith walked in, we were all shooting baskets, and a little pip-squeak of a kid named Gordon called Blue Barney Fife after which Barney picked up Gordon by the throat and held him in mid-air until the little jerk’s eyes crossed, and then dropped him into an embarrassed and shapeless heap on the gym floor right under the basket. Of course, that incident only increased Barney’s legendary status as a possible psychopath. After that I was much more attentive to evening newscasts, always watching for images of Barney Blue, serial killer, still at large. 

Years later I heard that Barney had married and was raising a family. Go figure. At any rate on those news programs where I expected any moment to see Barney’s picture for some heinous crime, I was instead delighted to see more and more news about the Kennedys at the White House, where concerts and state dinners continued to be given, and Jacqueline would speak French, Italian, and Spanish when the need arose. Then there was that wonderful TV special of Jacqueline giving a tour of the White House, which she was working so hard to restore. It was then that I decided that I had to visit the White House someday.

August 22, 2011

Starting High School, circa 1960, Exerpted from John Bolinger's Memoir

Today is the first day of school for public school students in Washington, DC, and probably everywhere.

In the introduction to his book, Boom! Voices of the Sixties, Tom Brokaw quotes John Lennon: "The thing the sixties did was to show us the possibilities and the responsibility we all had. It wasn't the answer. It just gave us a glimpse of the possibility."

John commenced his high school education in 1960, the beginning of the era of possibilites and responsibility, to which Lennon alludes. Below is a section exerpted from Come on Fluffy, This Ain't No Ballet.  Enjoy!

You can buy the Kindle version of John's memoir from Amazon, www.amazon.com/dp/B0056UF30G.
Annie


In 1960, school started the Tuesday after Labor Day. We were back in Hammond by then, where my parents had bought a house just before Grandma B’s death. After moving, we had just enough time to buy some school clothes before enrolling at Donald E. Gavit High School. All the clothes I ever wore in high school came from Sears, Goldblatt’s, and Carson Pirie Scott and Company. They were the department stores, where almost everyone I knew bought everything he had ever owned. Cotton slacks, short sleeve dress shirts for early fall, socks, a beige cardigan sweater, an argyle pull-over sweater, underwear, and a pair of gray Hushpuppy shoes were the items Mom bought me that day. I was, or thought I was, ready for high school.

On Labor Day, Dad had a cook-out on our brick patio and invited our new neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Beanblossom along with their son Ralph, who would be in my Spanish class, taught by Senor Calderon, who was also our World History teacher. Ralph was a freshman too, and because the school was brand new, we would both be in its first graduating class. Ralph was not a very good student, but he was considered very cute and cool by most of the girls, including the prettiest ones. I always hoped that some of his popularity would rub off onto me, though it never did. Picture a young Tom Cruise, and you’ll know how Ralph looked, but as is always the case with boys, it wasn’t just his good looks that made him popular. He had bravado and panache, words I didn’t even know until after a whole semester of freshman vocabulary lessons. Popular boys always had a certain swagger, never seemed to take anything too seriously, dressed in a cool, casual way, and had at least a slight bad-boy image based upon things like drawing very unflattering caricatures of unpopular teachers during class, throwing food in the cafeteria, doing mild graffiti in the boys’ washrooms about popular girls and their extracurricular activities, and getting low but not necessarily failing grades on report cards. It always amazed me that the boys that beautiful and intelligent girls most often wanted to date were the ones with motor cycles, tattoos, much more unusual in the 1960’s, and flat top haircuts that were so severe and sharply done, they might cut through stone or glass, or greasy hair styles that might increase a guy's total cholesterol by two hundred points. Being good at sports didn’t hurt either, but being an athlete wasn’t really a requirement for popularity. Image was everything, which I suspect is still true in high schools today, and image was certified by one’s going steady with a gorgeous girl, whose image was generally based upon comparisons to Barbie dolls, Annette Funicello, Sandra Dee, Yvette Mimieux, Carol Lynley, or Connie Francis. Of course, male stereotypical images of what was cool were determined by Elvis, Frankie Avalon, Fabian, Ricky Nelson, Troy Donahue, and Tab Hunter. That meant that somone like me didn’t have a chance to be considered anything but a second-class side-kick to somebody like Dobie Gillis.

My friendship with Ralph survived all this and the fact that my mother was so pathetic at remembering people’s names. That September of 1960, Mom had met Ralph’s mother, Mrs. Beanblossom only once at our backyard cook-out, and one day while I was harvesting the last of our garden tomatoes, Mom was watering flowers in the backyard. Our neighbor was in her garden too just on the other side of the four-foot cedar fence, when I heard my mother say in her cheerful, crystal clear voice, “Good morning, Mrs. Brussel Sprout.” Only my mother could screw up a name so badly and not realize it even afterward, but I’ll never forget the look on Mrs. Beanblossom’s face, as though she wasn’t sure it was intended as a joke or that somehow Mom’s elevator didn’t go all the way to the top. Then Mrs. Beanblossom looked at me for what appeared to be some confirmation, but I simply smiled as though I hadn’t heard a thing and that I was unrelated to the strange woman watering roses in our back yard. Mrs. Beanblossom never looked at me again without the same suspicious gaze that seemed doubtful of my mentality, as though my own cranial attic might not be completely furnished either. Thanks, Mom.

For Mr. Gilbert’s Biology I class we were all expected to create and turn in our individual insect collections that had to include at least one hundred bugs. Maka’s Craft Store certainly sold plenty of styrofoam sheets and stick pins that semester. Of all areas in biology my least favorite was insects. Fortunately, we had to get most of the information from our reading in the textbook, so there was very little lecturing on the subject of bugs. Besides, Mr. Gilbert was much too busy sharing with us his many stories of lurid biological phenomena. Those stories are what I remember most clearly about the class. One story was about a man at Inland Steel Company in Gary, Indiana who had been backed over by a heavy industrial crane and literally cut in two just above the waist, where the wound had been perfectly sealed by the tremendous weight of the crane. The poor man was totally conscious, able to talk, felt no pain, and lived for more than seven hours. Another local story was one about a cow in Lowell, Indiana, that had given birth to a two-headed calf. Mr. G even had photos for that story. All of those tabloid tales assured that no one ever slept during class, except on the relatively rare occasions when Mr. G would lecture on lessons from our text book, subjects on everything from chromosomes to Corn Smut. I often missed details of Mr. Gilbert’s lectures due to my fascination with his Adam’s apple, which traveled like a little elevator smoothly up and down his long neck. It was a distraction that others too enjoyed more than those lectures, so at least I was not alone.

My insect collection took a whole month to assemble, and I managed to find most of the specimens before frost, except for two spiders from our basement, which I needed in order to reach my quota of one hundred examples. I had to remove two legs from each of the dead spiders, so that they might look like insects, as arachnids were not to be included. I figured Mr. Gilbert wouldn’t have the time or energy to examine carefully more than one hundred-twenty insect collections from his four freshman biology classes, so I hoped he might not even notice the “insectified” spiders in the bottom corner of my collection case. I also made up some silly Latin sounding classifications for the mutated spiders, “omnivus caractivus” and “petuma victabin.” There were huge red question marks beside these when my project was returned. The red ink dug into the paper right down to the styrofoam underneath. There was also a note about the pinching bug I had included, which was four times its original size and extremely flat due to my brother’s having dropped a big Webster’s Dictionary on it the day I finished the project. The final project grade of “D” was also dug into the paper in blood-red ink. My final thought on the whole business was whether insects might have their own little heaven, free of styrofoam and stick pins.

August 20, 2011

Leaving Home for Freshman Year of College, Circa 1964, by John Bolinger

Yesterday, a close friend drove his only child down to Williamsburg, for her freshman year, at William and Mary, as my only child gets ready for another year of grad school, at home, in DC.  When I was going off to college for my freshman year, my roommate, with whom I had exchanged a few letters, and I concerned ourselves with curtains, matching bedspreads, dorm room decor, and fashion trends, dictated by the August issue of Seventeen Magazine. Nowadays, I am told, by members of the class of 2015, that dorm decor is passe. Divvying up who brings mini-frig, espresso machine, flat-screen TV,  microwave, Brita pitcher are what is pressing. 

John wrote a sweet chapter about going off to college, for his freshman year, at Ball State U, in 1964,  in the second volume of his memoirs, Come on Fluffy, This Ain't No Ballet!  I share, with you, John's recollections, below. Don't you wish you could be a college freshman again...for a day?! Tempus fugit!

Annie


    Chapter 29    Frosh

     Mom, Dad, David, and Connie would all be with me on the trip taking me to Muncie.  The trunk was loaded, and we were off.  Connie, then eleven years old, regretted having to leave her already impressive collection of Beatle memorabilia, the posters and magazine pictures of which completely covered the knotty pine paneling of her bedroom and even part of the ceiling.  Figurines and Beatle record albums dotted her collection too, and there was not one of the records she didn’t own and display on her dresser or window sills.  Her favorite Beatle was Paul whose very name made her swoon, even as David and I came close to gagging, though we did like Paul’s music.

     Arriving in Muncie a day before my dorm opened, we were met by John Starnes, a tall, lanky graduate student, who was the “floor manager” of Essex House in Whitcraft Hall, where I would be a student resident in room 217.  As the room was not quite ready, and the dining hall would not be open until the next afternoon, John suggested I show my family the campus while he saw to my bed linens and got me a key.

     After giving my family an abbreviated tour and letting David and Connie rub Frog Baby’s nose in the art gallery, Connie suggested we all go to the Rivoli Movie Theater downtown, where she had noticed on the marquis the Beatle movie title, A HARD DAY’S NIGHT.  After almost convincing my parents that the film would be an historic viewing experience and that if she didn’t see it, she would probably die from grief, Mom and Dad agreed that we should go.  None of us had any feeling of disappointment, even my parents, who were still loyal fans of Benny Goodman, the Dorsey Brothers, and Glenn Miller.  The comic insanity of the movie, which would be copied by countless other rock groups and even inspire a television show called, “The Monkees,” won us over, giving my sister an obvious sense of pride and accomplishment at her having recommended it.  My brother’s comment that the movie was, “cool” only reinforced my sister’s adoration of The Fab Four.

     Dad decided to drive back to Hammond the same day after dropping me off at the dorm, which was a brand new building and in which I was to be the very first freshman resident, as only the grad students would be arriving until the next day.  Of course, this gave me the chance to choose the bed nearer the window.  The two desks were on either side of the window, but I chose the one with the telephone, which was inside a kind of revolving tube in the wall so that it could be shared by two rooms, that is to say by four students.  The largest rooms on our floor were the ones at either end of the hall, each housing three students, but I was glad not to have the confusion, extra noise, and possible eccentricity of a third roommate.  All I knew at that time was that my roommate’s name was Stephen D. Etter, and he was from Kokomo, Indiana, majoring in art.

     John Starnes worried that I was all alone in a foreign territory, and he took me under his wing to introduce me to the rest of the graduate staff and even invited me to join them for dinner at a restaurant called “The Patio.”  The twelve staff members were all very friendly, engaging me in their conversations and showing genuine interest in my being at Ball State.  My only suspicion was that a couple of them actually seemed overly anxious to establish a friendly bond as though they might be winning my loyalty in preparation for making me some kind of narc to help them out when the hundreds of other freshmen arrived the next day.  Looking back, I can see that my feeling of being put on my guard was only a tiny bit paranoid.  It turned out that later on a few freshmen were indeed recruited as stool pigeons who would report questionable activity to the staff.

     I slept well that first night, as the dorm was absolutely quiet, something I would never again be able to say.  Ever after there would be, despite rules for quiet after ten in the evening, a barrage of music from record players and radios from almost every room, which would become a familiar college cacophony, especially during warmer weather, since there was no air conditioning, and windows remained open much of the fall and spring terms.  One would have thought that my dorm was the music building.

     The next morning the dining hall had not yet opened, so I walked downtown to a little restaurant called Aunt Shirley’s Chicken Shack for breakfast and returned to the dorm to find that many cars were already dropping off students, who in spite of their expensive-looking Madras shirts and Italian sandals, had the appearance of clueless freshmen, just like me.  Opening the door to room 217, I found two guys sitting in the arm chairs, open luggage and unpacked clothing strewn about on the bed away from the window and over the desk.

     “You must be John,” said the one with dark hair.

     “Call me Bud,” I replied in a sudden and unexplainable need to sound less aloof and more like one of the guys.  “You must be Steve,” I continued.

     “Call me Denny.  My full name is Stephen Densmore Etter, but if you tell anybody my middle name, I’ll have to kill you,” he laughed.  “This is my friend, Richard Thatcher.  We grew up together, and he’ll be in Elliot Hall on the other side of the campus.”

     “Call me Dick,” said Denny’s companion, who was blond, statuesque and blue-eyed, like the movie star, Troy Donahue, giving me the immediate if unfair impression that he would be yet another fierce competitor in the quest to find dates on campus.

     Denny said that it made no difference to him which bed and desk he had, as he had already resolved neither to sleep nor to study all that much.  That statement at the time seemed to give me a clear if terrifying look at my college roommate, but I decided to give him a chance to prove his worth before having go push him out our second-story window.  As it turned out, Denny was quiet and very considerate, even if eccentric.  For example, as an art major, he had an easel set up in our room near the window in order to do oils on canvas.  What made this activity unusual was Denny’s superstitious insistence upon wearing his girl friend Christine’s silk panties as a sort of beret during his artistic creations and playing a recording of the Philadelphia Symphony Orchestra’s performance of “The Sorcerer’s Apprentice.”  Denny said that his paint brushes were his brooms and magic wands.

     In those days the campus dorm dining hall required on Sundays that girls wear dresses and that boys wear coats and neckties.  Buzz Williams, one of our dorm mates complied with that rule but didn’t think that wearing flip-flops would be questioned until the Sunday he was sent back upstairs to put on shoes and socks.  Then there was a guy named “Duck” from a room two doors down from ours, who would pocket in a canvas bag any extra bread or rolls to satisfy his regular midnight cravings for snacks.  Though the girls’ dorms were separate, we dined together, and they were in Palmer House requiring an elevator ride to a check-in desk manned by a stout woman with tortoise shell glasses, while Bradley Hall next to us was separated only by a fire door, which was carefully bolted.

     The third week into September while climbing along the stone outer window ledge toward a particular second floor window of the girl’s dorm, Bradley House, Denny slipped and fell to the garden below, barely missing a granite bench but spraining his left ankle and limping sheepishly back upstairs with amber and gold mums in every available orifice.  Meanwhile, the girl whose room he had been invited to visit in this unconventional and dangerous way was screaming as she leaned out her window with the screen removed, her hands on both her cheeks.  “Are you all right?  Speak to me, Denny!”  Later that afternoon  Duck and I paid a visit to the campus infirmary, where Denny was being checked and having his ankle bandaged.  I took him some mums, and Duck gift wrapped him a kaiser roll left from the previous Sunday dinner.

     College classes  in lecture halls were new experiences for me, especially in terms of the impersonal space shared by so many at once and the arduous note taking for the long and sometimes lavish lectures by professors who were relaxed enough at times even to smoke cigarettes or pipes.  Some profs were riveting, like Professor Haave for English, who wore a high collar always with a silk scarf and spoke rapturously about Thomas Wolfe.  Others, like the one for American History could have been very successful anesthesiologists without even using gas or chemicals.  Then there were the specialty classes like advanced French with twenty or fewer students and were much more intimate as well as more demanding in terms of individual response expected by the prof.  Dr. Robert Cohen was my first French professor, an elegantly tall, tanned fellow of lean physique, whose silver hair and melodious voice helped to make him a much more popular teacher than Dr. Javor, whose two large, protruding, silver front teeth were said to have blinded students temporarily when he lectured near the classroom windows on sunny days.

     My first physical education class in college was tennis that quarter, which was conducted on outdoor courts well into the snows of November, even though the rather sadistic instructor insisted we play wearing shorts and polo shirts.  His theory was that the cold air would keep us alert and moving, and he was right.  The cold air often kept me moving right along to the campus coffee shop instead of to tennis class.  Those absences affected my skills tests, which brought a final grade of “D” for the course.  The grade lept from the page of otherwise high marks for other classes, but it was the “D” about which Dad had the most to say, insisting that there was no excuse for a low grade in a class I wasn’t even attending all the time.  The instructor, Mr. Kornas, agreed.

     In mid October, something happened that brought back the only unpleasant memory of my high school senior trip to New York City.  It was a Friday evening after nine, two hours from curfew when the dorm’s outer doors would be locked for the night.  There had recently developed a despicably immature habit on the upper floors of the boys’ dorm of waiting for guys to sit with their dates on the granite benches in the garden below until they kissed the girls.  At that moment, Buzz, Duck, and Rick Smeltzer would throw a small bucket of water through a window screen to drench the poor, unsuspecting couple below.  It was admittedly an activity wanting in civilized behavior and certainly revealing of the need on the part of a few socially challenged freshmen to “get out more.”  That evening I had left our door open to go downstairs to the snack machine for some pretzels to go with the popcorn I was making.  Denny was downtown with his girlfriend Chris who was visiting from Kokomo and staying with one of her friends in another dorm for the weekend.

     I began to make the popcorn in the electric popper on my desk, and just as I was closing the door to our room, I heard a door at the end of the hall fly open hard enough to hit the wall with a crash.  I looked out to see an enormous guy wearing a letter man jacket heading my way and cursing about his girlfriend being soaked by water thrown from somebody’s window.  “I’ll kill the stupid son of a bitch who did this!” he yelled.  “Beth could get pneumonia from this dumb ass prank!”

     I instantly turned out the light and jumped into Denny’s bed, still wearing my clothes and shoes and pulling the blanket  over myself to feign sleep.  On the record player was 101 Strings playing the Beatle song, “From Me to You.” As the lid from the popcorn popper began to fall off the rising excess of popping corn, the lid hit the floor just as the door, which I had not locked opened violently and the lights went on to reveal a mean looking giant whose heavy breathing signaled an anger way out of control, that made my heart begin to beat like a playing card stuck in the spokes of a moving bicycle tire.  I rubbed my eyes as though I had been asleep for hours, sitting up but still clutching the blanket over my shoulders.  Without saying a word, the guy headed straight for the window, running his hand across the wet screen, which told me right away that Buzz, Duck and Rick had been at it again, this time using the window of our room while I had been downstairs for those few moments.  Then the guy’s massive hand reached for a corner of my blanket, pulling it off like a criminal’s final defense against the death penalty.  His monster voice said only, “I should really mash you to a pulp, but I believe in reincarnation, so I don’t step on insects!  But if this ever happens again, you’re a dead man.”  With that he strolled across the room, took a handful of the now burning popcorn, walked out, slamming the door so hard behind him that the record player arm skipped to another song, “Bad Boy,” and my framed picture of Bob Dylan fell off the wall.  In the hallway outside my door were Duck, Buzz, and Rick, rolling on the floor, like rabid hyenas.

Peace Corps 50th Anniversary in Washington, DC, September 22 - 24 ... Hotel Rooms

...And now a brief commercial interruption....

This year marks the 50th Anniversary of the founding of the Peace Corps, with two days of celebrations, in Washington, DC, September 22 - 24. (http://www.peacecorps.gov/index.cfm?shell=about.fiftieth)

Hotel availability is limited, because the International Monetary Fund's biennial Washington, DC meeting is going on, during the same dates.

Kevin Elder, of Planit Meetings, is holding a block of rooms, for Peace Corps events, at the Hotel Rouge, a Kimpton Hotel, a few blocks, from Peace Corps offices, and event sites.  Please contact Kevin, for your Peace Corps reunion hotel needs, or any time you need one, or many hotel rooms, in Washington, DC, and other cities, in the US.

Kevin has been in the hotel business for more than 25 years, and has preferred rates at many hotel brands. He and his quality assurance team regularly visit hotels, that he sells, to determine if they meet his high standards.

Email or call Kevin, for your Peace Corps reunion, or other hotel needs!
Kevin Elder
Planit Meetings
kelder@planitmeetings.com

919-387-0057 phone
919-387-3731 fax
202-257-8330 cell