Sociology 1A
A Memoir of the Sixties
Part 2 of 2
Your
wife did the best she could to keep the kids quiet and occupied. This included
your two vivacious daughters and the little boy she took care of, a nervous
little bird named Donnie. He was nearly two and still in diapers and he cried a
lot. You could hold him and comfort him and calm his crying, but smiles were
hard to come by, and laughter just wasn’t part of Donnie’s personality. But the
thing that made Donnie unique, that set him apart from all of his peers, was
the fact that when he pooped his pants the smell was unbearable. It was so bad
it could trigger your gag reflex. You had to tie a bandanna around your face
like a cowboy in order to change his diaper, and even that didn’t help much.
You found yourself asking What the hell
is your mother feeding you?
Your
shift at LRL ended at 8:00 a.m. There was a great donut shop (it reminded you
of Scotty’s in Vallejo) on the north edge of the campus, right on your way
home, and now and then you’d stop and pick up a mixed dozen for the family.
Generally, you were home in bed asleep by 9:00 a.m. and wide-awake around 3:00
in the afternoon. Then it was time to get up and help take care of the kids.
You’d
pray Donnie would hold his fire until after his mom picked him up.
_____
Several
evenings each week and most Saturdays, you drove up Highway 24, through the
Caledecott Tunnel and on to Walnut Creek, to sell shoes at Grodins. Fred was
the department manager, a great guy who became a good friend. Freddie had a
line of malarkey that was perfect for talking a customer out of his old shoes
and into a new pair of Florsheims. Years earlier, when he first applied for a
job at Grodins, the store manager asked him What
do you know about men’s clothes? Freddie said Well, I’ve been wearing ‘em since I was fifteen. The manager
cracked up laughing and hired Freddie on the spot. Brash, cocky, funny, and a
pretty good golfer, too—that’s Fred.
The
Bay Area stores were covered by the Retail Clerks Union, so you were paid a
flat hourly wage, or six percent commission, whichever was greater. Walnut
Creek was a good store and you always made commission. Actually, you made out
pretty well for a part-time job.
Occasionally
they’d assign you to work at the Grodins in Berkeley, on Telegraph Avenue just
south of Sather Gate. That location was dying a slow death because most of the
students shopped at the local Army-Navy Surplus store. You’d stand around and
watch the colorful scene out on Telegraph Avenue, watching the clock tick
slowly toward closing time, wishing you were back in the Walnut Creek action.
Or
home in bed asleep.
_____
It
was a bright January day and you were going through the mail, and there it was:
the envelope from Merritt College with the grade report for the fall semester.
You opened it and saw that you had earned an A in the class you completed.
And then on the next line you read: Sociology
1A – Incomplete. Holy crap! John Lennon didn’t turn in a drop; he gave you
an incomplete.
After
work the next morning, you headed for the Merritt campus to take up the issue
with the front office. The lady at the counter listened sympathetically and
then told you that only the instructor could change the grade report.
Unfortunately, Mr. Lennon wasn’t teaching a class in the spring semester and
wouldn’t be on campus. So, she looked up his phone number and gave him a call;
the phone was disconnected. You stressed the urgency of the matter, that you
had to submit your application to Sac State and you needed this corrected ASAP.
She thought about it for a while and then said I’m not supposed to do this, but here is the last address we have for
him.
You
jumped in the car and headed for the address on Bancroft Avenue in Berkeley,
which turned out to be an apartment building that had seen better days. You
found his apartment and rang the bell and he answered with a hearty Hi, how ya doin’? like you were a long
lost friend. You explained the importance of changing his grade report from an
incomplete to a drop, and he immediately launched another attempt to change
your mind. Tell ya what, I’ll give you a
book, you’ll read it and give me a couple-page report and I’ll give you a
grade. Whataya say? You said Thanks,
but no thanks. You didn’t add that his proposal offended your sense of
ethical behavior. He finally gave up and promised to phone in the change. Then
he grinned and waved and wished you well as you hurried away to your car.
That’s that you said to yourself—again. But this
time you didn’t have much confidence.
_____
For
the most part, your experience at Merritt College had been positive. You’d
completed all your general education requirements, maintained a 3.8 GPA,
taken all the computer science classes you could squeeze in, and generally
enjoyed the experience.
Over
the course of several semesters, you’d come to know a couple of guys you
enjoyed hanging out with during class breaks. One was a CHP officer, the other
a guard at San Quentin. Both were Black and though they were farther along in
their careers than you, it was amazing how closely their lives paralleled
yours. They were concerned for their families, looking to find homes in clean,
safe neighborhoods, looking for good schools for their kids. They were just
like you and you looked forward to chatting with them every week.
When
Martin Luther King was assassinated, suddenly it seemed like a wall had sprung
up between you. You felt a decided coolness, as though you weren’t welcome in
their circle anymore. Even though it was understandable, it hurt, and you never
really got over it. Maybe you tried too hard, or said the wrong things? Maybe
they just needed to process this devastating loss in their own way? With time,
you could have fixed it, and perhaps they’d be your friends to this day; but
your time there was running out. It remains one of the few bad memories
associated with Merritt College.
Another
bad one was the night the Black Panthers came on campus and locked the
Faculty Senate in a meeting room, refusing to let them go until they agreed to
the hiring of more Black instructors and the development of an African-American studies
curriculum. There was a rumor Angela Davis was with them but you could
never confirm it.
You
cut class that night and went home. All you wanted to do was hug your kids.
_____
As
the spring of ’69 progressed, so did The Plan. You moved your family from
Alameda to the house in Fair Oaks near Sacramento. Your wife went to work for Allstate
Insurance, and your mom lived with them during the week to take care of the
kids. You continued to work at LRL, living during the week at your mom’s home
in Vallejo and commuting to Berkeley. Your application to Sac State was in the
mail, along with a copy of your transcript. According to plan, you would start
the fall semester in Sacramento and work part-time at the Grodins located in
Country Club Center.
One
morning, you decided to call the Merritt College
office and check on that grade report, just in case. The woman who answered the
phone made sure you were authentic and then went to pull your records. Sociology 1A? Ah yes, you got an A.
After you picked up your jaw, you thanked her and hung up the phone.
So,
John Lennon had changed the incomplete to an A. You had to think about that for
a minute. Should you call back and go through the nosebleed of trying—yet
again—to get the record corrected? Or not?
You
thought about your life. Did it not range from the pristine suburbs of Alameda
to the ghetto campus in Oakland, from the radicalized scene at UC Berkeley to
the upscale shopping malls of Walnut Creek? In your daily travels, didn’t you
move in and out of various layers of society, through institutions both revered
and reviled? Did you not rub shoulders with stoners, barbeque purveyors, future
scientists, and Black Panthers? Isn’t sociology the study of society, its
systems and institutions, and wasn’t your life a field study in progress? If
anybody deserved an A in sociology, most certainly it was you.
Damn
the ethics! Full speed ahead!
_____
It
wasn’t long after that when The Plan began to fall apart. The coup de grace came in the form of a
polite letter from Sacramento State College, advising that they could not
accept you for the fall term due to an enrollment glut. The letter suggested you apply at Humboldt State in Arcata, way up north, where the application
volume was less impacted. Unfortunately, you now lived in Fair Oaks. Arcata
would be a hell of a commute. And so you found a job in the Sacramento area and
settled in to work and care for your family, your college dreams deferred for
the time being.
That
was a long time ago. At the age of eighty, it’s good you remember all
the people and places, the sights and sounds and smells, and especially what it
was like to be so young and alive and lucky, to run down Grove Street with an
old man’s laughter at your back, sprinting toward a future that would fill your
heart, then break it, then fill it again. And all of those memories triggered
by a simple line on a transcript:
_____
A fine trip through many great memories. I made that trip as well with blog-turned-book "Travel On." Hard work, a run of luck and often the turn of a dime all made it happen. Thank you for sharing your run Chuck.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Tom. "Travel On" is a favorite, a fun and insightful read. How 'bout giving us Travel On 2?
Delete