A Twisted Tale about Being a Good Role Model [1971]

My junior year at Hamline I lucked out getting no roommate at the Sorin Men’s Dormitory.   The guy just never showed-up.  I really got into enjoying time by myself thinking and reading.  My favorite book junior year was The Arrogance of Power by J. William Fulbright and my favorite thing to do was smoke pot with a towel under the door.  Our intramural fall football team wasn’t a repeating champion because Kenny Berkenwall, our quarterback, had dropped out of school.

By spring semester I knew I wanted to also live solo senior year and the only way to guarantee not having a roommate was to become a Resident Assistant (RA), so I applied.  Every dormitory floor has one RA to help the Head Residents (usually an adult married team of graduate students) maintain order and account for all students staying alive, if not attending classes.

The problem was that Kenny Berkenwall all the sudden showed up one night with a lady friend he had met in Taos, and after a 24 hour car ride in Kenny’s burgundy Mustang convertible, she really wanted a shower.  So being the considerate and chivalrous gentleman that I am, I posted myself as the look-out at the men’s shower room down the hall while she showered.  Unfortunately one of the other guys on the floor walked in and I had to shoo him away, all of which escalated into a big incident that had to be reported to the Dean.

didn't even peek

and I didn’t even peek

That, the Dean explained, despite my protestations that I was only doing the responsible thing, was enough to can my application to be a Resident Assistant.  But good fortune struck late that summer.  One week before fall semester started and while the Dean was off to Europe, the Head Residents at co-ed Drew Hall, the Blazers, learned that the person they and the Dean had picked to be the RA on the male side of the fourth floor freshmen wing was suddenly not returning.  After poring over the rejected applicants, and unable to reach the Dean, they called and asked if I would accept the job.  (It did pay a little, in addition to living alone.)

Tomorrow:  A Moderation of Moderation

 

Finally a New Leaf [fifth daily dose of Freshman Year]

Sophomore year started out with big news.  Our incoming class president (whom we’d just elected in the Spring) wasn’t coming back having been arrested trying to cross the Mexican Border with marijuana packed in his tires, apparently not figuring the tires would heat up; and when he got to the border, the marijuana was smelling like it had already been lit.

Going to college between 1968 and 1972 was like that.  In 1968 hardly anybody smoked pot.  In 1972 almost everybody did.  In 1968 you could only be in a girl’s room on a Saturday afternoon with the door cracked.  In 1972 we were pretty close to having co-ed showers (that’s another story).  In 1968 only some of us were conscious of the world around us; by 1972 we were all marching for peace and getting on busses to Washington D.C. to protest the war.  In 1968 I was one of the few peaceniks for McCarthy, and there were plenty of Republicans on campus; by 1972 we were all (almost all) rabid Nixon-haters and for McGovern.

Turning over a new leaf

Turning over a new leaf

Rock music and marijuana smoking had a lot to do with the changes, but to this day I believe something bigger was going-on:  We were in a cultural change to be a people more into sharing, less into materialism, not so much caring how fancy you dressed, more willing to tolerate non-conformity; a society more open to individual freedoms and expression and equal rights for us all (women and minorities as well).   I explore why this didn’t carry forward or become big changes politically in my “Open Letter to Jack & Nick,” but I’ll always wonder what if RFK hadn’t been assassinated?  What if the Democrats mad at Humphrey about Chicago hadn’t sat out the 1968 election?  What if Tricky Dick (Nixon) hadn’t employed dirty tricks to beat McGovern?  What if all of us 1972 Hamline grads had been able to do whatever we wanted, rather than be saddled with college debt and needing to join The Establishment to pay back loans?  What if there would have been some real leadership in the 70s instead of an onslaught of cynicism?

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 

 


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Bye Bye George [fourth daily dose of Freshman Year]

The last time I saw George was the last day of the school year.  (He was one of the ones who flunked out and wasn’t coming back.)  All year long the ten of us Sherman Housers (not including the RA) had a contest to see who was best at getting a date.  Each time we asked a girl out we had to tell the others and we kept this big scoreboard on the wall.  (Remember they were tearing the house down at the end of the year so some magic marker on the wall didn’t seem like a big deal.)  Whoever had the best percentage at the end of the year won a case of beer.  Well, one of the sophomores, who actually did spend plenty of time studying rather than dating, plotted all year for this case of beer.  On the second to last day of the school year, he made his one and only call; she said yes (it was planned); and batting a thousand he won the case of beer which we all drank together (including her) the last day of the year.

Keeping Score

Keeping Score

Well, one thing led to another, and pretty soon we were saying, “You know, they’re tearing this place down next week, let’s help them get started,” and we were knocking down walls and heaving stuff out the front window, when we spied the President of the University coming for a walk to see how the New Dorms were progressing.  “Oh Christ,” we all said and ran to hide as the President made a beeline for our front door.   I found a good place to hide in a closet on the second floor, but George jumped in with me just as the President hit the top of the stairs and saw the closet door close.

What a classy move that President made.  He didn’t care to know who we were, didn’t open the door, just knocked on it, and said “I know you’re in there.  I’m going to finish my walk.  When I come back that front yard better be cleaned-up.”  I’ll be forever grateful he didn’t open the door and see me crouched in a corner looking like a five year-old.  If he were still alive, this would be the first he knew that was me.

Tomorrow:  Finally a New Leaf


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On the Way to Mardi Gras [third daily dose of Freshman Year]

Me, George & Coby

Me, George and Coby

For Spring Break me and the New Hampshire kid, George was his name, hitchhiked to New Orleans for Mardi Gras.  Stayed at my parents’ in Chicago, but needed to find a room in St. Louis.  In those days only The Rich had credit cards so it was common practice to just sign for a room and pay when you left.  Only I used my fake IDs so we could skip-out.  Even ordered a bottle of Old Grand Dad on room service that I never paid for.  We got a great ride out of St. Louis from a guy towing an RV who told us to make ourselves at home in the RV and help ourselves to the beverages in the fridge.  He dropped us in Memphis and I did the fake ID thing again at the Hotel Tennessee.  Only this time, unlike the Holiday Inn the night before, the only way out was through the lobby and if we left with our suitcases without paying they’d probably stop us.  Since we were trying to save our limited funds for Bourbon Street, we needed a Plan B.  Out on the street we ran into a young couple also on the lam.  We said we’d buy them a tank of gas if they went to our room, threw our luggage out the window, and gave us a ride to the next town.

Mission accomplished the four of us headed for Louisiana, but one tank wasn’t enough and when we balked at paying for a second tank, they did something that actually crossed the line for me and George.  We were OK with ripping off a large corporation like the Holiday Inn, but not stealing someone else’s money.  Nevertheless we were eyewitnesses, and probably accomplices in the eyes of the law, to the two of them going into a supermarket, pretending to be filling up a grocery cart, waiting for someone to leave their purse unattended, wheeling that cart to the next aisle, and stealing the cash in the purse to buy a second tank of gas.  When we got to the Louisiana border, they asked us to drive because they really were wanted in Louisiana and just wanted to get to her mother’s house in Hammond without risking being pulled over.

Turns out Hammond is too small a town to pull off the fake ID trick for a third night in a row.  After we drove to the mother’s house, George and I hoofed it back to the main drag and checked into the Holiday Inn, the only inn in town.  Put our suitcases in the room and proceeded to one of the few bars in town, where we found an older women (by 18 year-old standards) who was willing to buy us drinks.  When we told her it was time for us to leave, she asked for just one more dance and plunked another quarter in the juke box.  I’ll never forget the refrain to the country song she picked:  “If heartaches were alcoholic I’d be drunk all the time.”

We walked back to the Holiday Inn and there were two State Trooper cars parked out in front.  I told George this looked like trouble to me, and when we found our room was double-locked so we couldn’t get in, suggested we high heel it out of there.  But George insisted he needed to get his belongings, and besides there was the bottle of Old Grand Dad we were saving for Bourbon Street,

so I decided to try to bluff our way through.  George hid out because we’d checked in as one person only.  “Say,” I said to the night clerk, “seems I’ve been locked out of my room.”

“Ehh, why don’t you come with me,” he says, and we walk into an office where the two State Troopers were.

“Seems to be some problem paying for your hotel bills, son,” one of the Troopers says.

“What?  No problem at all,” I said, reaching for my wallet and fishing out two of the only $20s I had.

“Well,” one of the coppers says to the clerk, “you got your money,” and they let me in the room.  I’m thinking they knew about the other two places and just didn’t want to go through a huge extradition process.  As I was leaving the lobby one of them said, “Have a good time at Mardi Gras, son, but be careful with the Old Grand Dad.”

Next day we arrive in New Orleans, almost broke, and nowhere to stay.  (I was forever done with staying and not paying.)   George said he was bummed and wired home for enough money to buy a plane ticket back to Minnesota.  I gave blood, pan-handled and tried every which way I could (except stealing) to raise enough for my plane ticket.  Still was $50 short when we headed to the airport.  But in the ticket line I caught a break.  I was telling anybody who would listen that I was a college student just trying to get back to school but somebody stole my wallet.  A guy in a business suit said to me, “Ahh, you’re just pan-handling for booze money.”  But when I convinced him I was sincere, he said “Okay, but I’m watching you get on that airplane so you better be wanting to get back to Minnesota.”

Tomorrow:  Bye Bye George

 


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College Roommates [second daily dose of Freshman Year]

Later I pledged that fraternity, not because they had can openers, but because the president of the frat was also the student council president, a good student (and a prominent Minnesota politician to this day), and this frat house had a thing called “Project Give-A-Damn” where every Tuesday afternoon we all went and tutored inner-city grade school kids.  We knew how to have fun, and get good grades, and be kind to others.  (Of course pledging the fraternity, and some of our antics, make for a great story, but for another day.)

After being accepted at Hamline, I received a questionnaire in the mail asking to mark my housing preference:  all men’s dorm, co-ed dorm or “honor housing.”  I checked honor housing not expecting they’d put me in one – given my needing-a-new-leaf background – so I was surprised when the next letter I got said I was assigned to live freshman year at the Sherman House Honor House with seven other freshman, three sophomores, and a senior R.A. (Resident Assistant).   Turns out all the locals knew the “honor houses” were just a bunch of run-down houses the school had bought across the street from the campus, slated for demolition the following year to build new dormitories, and so mostly only us out-of-staters, who didn’t know better, had picked that as our choice for where to reside.

Us Sherman Housers were quite an assemblage from all over the country, New Hampshire, New York, New Jersey, Indiana, Illinois, Iowa and one kid from Bird Island, MN.  Me, the New Jersey kid (also named Andy), and the Bird Island kid were assigned the large second floor bedroom overlooking the big lawn by the girls’ dormitory.  Bird Island was still unpacking when I arrived, and I was dismayed to see he’d already placed a pen and pencil holder on the desk he wanted, not because I wanted that desk too, but because the holder was emblazoned with “In God We Trust.”  There being two Andys, one of us had to pick up a nickname quick.  Nobody took to my suggestion that they call me “Dirt.”  (Why I was called “Dirt” since third grade is another story.)  Second Saturday of the Fall, O.J. Simpson was coming to play the Univ. of Minnesota Golden Gophers, and after we went to that game, played our own tackle football game.  When the other Andy tackled me, he said “Take that O.J.,” and so in college I was known as O.J.

OJ and J.J. in the same mud?

OJ and J.J. in the same mud?

Even the sophomores were impressed that I arrived with my own set of fake IDs and pretty quickly our R.A. gave up on us as incorrigible and moved in with his girlfriend off campus, giving us free reign to decide What Is Fun.   Only problem was that too many of my roommates were just getting their first taste of fun and went slightly overboard, forgetting they had to study too.  One of the sophomores and four of the freshman in Sherman House flunked out that year having too much fun.  Fortunately I was in the habit of getting up early, getting to class on time, reading the assignments, and asking intelligent questions in class.  That’s all it took to get above average grades, with plenty of time left over for fun.  The thing that got my grades to law school admission level was never missing Dr. Marsh’s Saturday morning freshman class on the Great Depression.  (By my sophomore year the school had decided that asking freshmen to wake up before noon on Saturdays was improvident and discontinued Saturday classes.)

Dr. Marsh was impressed with my genuine interest in history and got me a job being a Tour Guide for the County Historical Society, where I got a reputation for personalizing the tours with anecdotes about the individuals the places were named for:  F. Scott Fitzgerald’s home, J.J. Hill’s mansion, the Gibbs’ farm, and so on.  I enlisted Dr. Marsh for help on the research, and of course after that, could only get A’s from him.  Took as many of Dr. Marsh’s courses as I could.

The first week back after Xmas break it was really cold in Minnesota.  Good timing for our “Sherman House Purple-Passion Body-Painting Bathing-Suit Party.”  We went to St. Paul’s “Worn-a-Bit” shop and secured enough mattresses to spread across our entire attic floor, covered the walls with shiny tin foil, borrowed some yellow-flashing traffic safety barriers, bought maybe 50 tubes of body paint, mixed a purple passion punch in two big milk canisters from a Bird Island farm, and invited a half-dozen other guys telling them they could only get in if they brought two or more dates, and everybody had to be wearing swim suits underneath.  Until I got married I used one of the brightly splattered sheets as a curtain in my several bachelor pads.

Tomorrow:  On the Way to Mardi Gras


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