Tuesday, February 11, 2014

Fifty Years Ago



All of the old media seem to be focused on events that transpired 50 years ago.  We have seen reruns of the first Julia Child TV show, the French Chef; we have read about and seen countless photos of John Glenn orbiting the earth; and, of course, there are the Beatles! They are everywhere just as they were 50 years ago: TV, radio, newspapers, magazines, and every time you turn around there is a new angle, a rehashed story, and a previously unpublished photo.  Everyone seems to be happy to talk about where they were and what they were doing when the Beatles first appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show - everyone that is, except me.  I was miserable!

I had been eighteen for almost two months, I was starting my second semester at the University of Connecticut, and most importantly, I was starving.  Starving as in not knowing where my next meal was going to come from or how I would find the money to buy something to eat.  This part of my college experience caught me rather by surprise and it was not a happy one.

When I graduated from Norwalk High School in June of 1963, I had been awarded a three hundred dollar scholarship.  It was based on need but I always said it was for perfect attendance.  Three hundred dollars went a long way in 1963, especially if you were attending one of the state schools in Connecticut.  I remember talking with a counselor about how far I could stretch three hundred dollars and was told that it would be enough for my first full year of study, including room and board and books and school supplies.  I was thrilled since I didn’t have that much saved from my old paper route or the money that I had made working for Sammy Savell’s Poultry Farm.  But knowing that I would have a whole year of not having to work and just be able read and write and attend classes was pure bliss.

The first semester went as planned.  Sure there were some unexpected glitches like Kennedy getting killed, but for the most part I was very happy at UCONN.  When I went home for Christmas things started to deteriorate.  My high school sweetheart was no longer interested in me and I noticed a rather understated tension between my mom and dad, which of course meant that there were money problems.  This was confirmed when I went to my “safe deposit” box, a little metal box that the bank gave me that I kept on a high closet shelf with the key taped to the back. I was going to get a little bit of my savings and buy some nice gifts for the family, but what I found were three IOUs from my dad.  I talked to him about it and he was clearly embarrassed but said he had no choice since there was very little construction work due to poor weather.  He promised that when things picked up in the spring he would put the money back.

Surprisingly, this didn’t really upset me since it wasn’t that first time that I had contributed to the ‘good’ of the family and I knew how cyclical construction was, especially in the winter.  Besides, there was still enough left to get some gifts and we all made the best of the situation and had as lovely a Christmas as we could.  I returned to UCONN feeling pretty good and eager to get back to my college routine.

I got a really lovely surprise when I got to my dorm room.  It turns out that a single had opened up and my roommate had been on the waiting list and got it. That meant that I had the entire room to myself, which was pretty darn amazing.  My glee was short lived.  I went down to the cafeteria in the dorm my first night back and when I showed my ID to the cashier, she said that it was no longer valid.  I wasn’t at all sure what that really meant but there was nothing I could do on a Sunday night so I found enough ‘travel’ money left over from the bus fare, to pay for my dinner. 

The next morning after my first two early classes, I went to Administration and tried to get to the bottom of this.  As it turned out, my three hundred dollars did cover all of my tuition and books for the whole year and it had covered my room and board for the first semester, but it only covered my room for the spring semester and I needed another sixty dollars for board. Well, sixty dollars at the time was about the same as the gross national product of Peru, and well beyond my ability to pay.  I was told that if I didn’t want full board, I was free to pay as I go, with cash.  Those were the two options and of course I choose the latter.

Which brings us to the Beatles.  By the time they were appearing on the Ed Sullivan Show, I had been five weeks into my new diet.  I had found a way to make a little bit of money by typing papers for my fellow students in the freshman dorm.  I had taken typing in high school instead of metal shop. (I was not and still am not very handy and besides, I was the only boy in typing!)  My Aunt Gigi had given me a brand new Smith Corona portable typewriter for my high school graduation and I could do a respectable fifty words a minute.  While the work was inconsistent and tended to bunch up at mid-term, I was making enough that I could eat one meal a day.  The rest of the meals were taken in my “private dining room.”  I tended to eat lunch since it was cheaper and I could pocket some bread, rolls or crackers, and then my dinner usually consisted of a cup of bouillon.  I had purchased an immersion coil and a couple of boxes of bouillon.  I would heat the water to a boil in my cup, select my cube, and inhale the fragrant scent of beef or chicken as I patiently waited for it to dissolve, all the time listening to the Beatles on my little radio.  I would sometimes vary my meal with the addition of a bit of ketchup that I had taken from the cafeteria. There were some nights when I just had hot water and ketchup and made believe it was tomato soup, and this was six years before Midnight Cowboy.

I was ever so thankful that I had no roommate and therefore didn’t have to tell anyone why I was sitting alone eating bouillon.  Surprisingly, after about five weeks of this I no longer felt hungry at night and it all started to become a regular part of my life, and I thought I would be able to stick it out until the end of the semester.  That all changed in early March.

I was down to my last fifteen cents and there was nothing on the horizon for typing for another few days.  I was walking back from my eight o’clock class one morning, which was on the far side of the campus.  It was very cold and there was a lot of snow on the ground.  I had decided that I would use the last of my money to buy a big bowl of hot oatmeal that would get me through the day, real comfort food.  I got to the dining room just as they were about to close the gates of the serving area, but managed to get my oatmeal, which came with milk, an added bonus.  I brought it back to the table; I was the only one still in the cafeteria.  I took the sugar jar and covered the oatmeal and then added the milk and stirred it all in.  Then I added even more sugar to the top to give it more crunch and calories. I took my first bite and spit it all over the table.  Some jerk had thought it would be funny to empty the sugar jar and replace it with salt.  My entire meal was ruined and all I could do was just sit and stare.  There was no sympathy from the cafeteria workers, all of whom were eager to go on break, and there was certainly no refund of my money. And so I sat, feeling wave after wave of self-pity until I realized that nothing was going to improve unless I took some action.

I swallowed my pride and went to see my freshman counselor.  He asked if I was willing to work part-time and I told him I would love to work part-time. Two days later, I was hired to work in the Pomology department.  I had never heard of Pomology but UCONN started as an Agricultural College and this branch of botany was involved with the study of fruit trees.  My job was to get to the orchards at six in the morning and remove all of the birds that had gotten caught in the netting covering the trees.  After that, it was duties as assigned for four hours per day, seven days a week.  As they said, Fruit Trees Take No Holidays. 

Within two weeks I was rolling in money, well not really - but by comparison I was a rich man.  That summer, and every summer thereafter for years and years, I worked construction and made more than enough money to cover everything to finish college in four years. 

And now you know why I’m not as nostalgic for the Beatles as others of my generation might be.  Every time I have bouillon I can still hear, “I Want to Hold Your Hand”.  To this day I add maple syrup to my oatmeal; never sugar.  
Wm

PS: And yes, when I went home for the summer, the IOUs were gone and the money was back, with interest!