What happened in Mrs. Hudson’s third
grade class might have actually happened in Miss Straw’s second grade class. My memories of childhood are like unstable
electrons that jump from one orbit to another.
This will probably be one of those blogs I delete when I think better
about it. As I remember incidents, and
put them on paper, I realize I wasn’t the brightest bulb in the box as a child.
Fairmount Elementary was a long monolithic three story
building made of red brick, stone, and concrete embellishments. Long rows of
large windows in the front let plenty of daylight into the class rooms. Part of the basement floor is underground,
since the hill the school sits on runs uphill, with the playground behind it
sitting at least a floor above the playground that sits in front of it. The huge asphalt playgrounds left no green
space, except for a little stretch of green embankment on the Cedar side that
served as a bleacher when we played kickball.
The trouble with kickball was the s lo w w w w n e s s of the
game – think of something worse than baseball where you sit in the dugout and
wait impatiently for your turn to bat.
With kickball you don’t get to stand there at the plate taking strikes
or balls. You get one kick. Miss
it and you’re out. Actually kick it, and the under inflated pink excuse for a
ball rarely got out of the infield. So
mostly you sat on the bleacher sideline, or in the kickers- up box,
slinging insults at the other team members. Some boys played little league
baseball and tried to bring their scripted insults to kickball. “The pitcher
has a rag arm” just doesn’t work in kickball. All the pitcher in kickball does
is roll the ball up to home plate. A very
boring game, and not much exercise.
In second or third grade, I was sitting and waiting in the
grass bleachers for my turn to kick. Checking
the fence row behind me, out of boredom,I found a piece of cardboard with a
round metal insert embedded the size of a large washer. I couldn’t
imagine its purpose, still can’t. The
hole in the metal ring sort of thing was just the size of my index
finger. It took a while to work my finger into it, but with kickball you’ve got
all the time in this world, and the next. It didn’t look like I was going to get
a second time at the plate. That inner clock told me it was about time for the
school bell, so I began working my finger out of the metal ring of a thing.
Twisting usually works with rings. I
worked diligently, then desperately, keeping my hands between my cocked knees, so my bleacher sitting team mates wouldn’t see the predicament I was in. The
finger was visibly swollen, looking more like a long thumb. The bell rang and I lollygagged
as the schoolyard emptied completely. Entering the mostly empty hallway I stood
outside Mrs. Hudson’s third grade door.
So the electron of fluctuating memory has settled in its
orbit. It had to have been third grade.
Second grade with Miss Straw was on the basement floor, near the lunch
room. So there I stood between the first
bell and the tardy bell, with the principal’s office at the end of the
hall. There was no escaping the fact
that I had a throbbing index finger, trapped in an unforgiving metal ring,
attached to a piece of cardboard about five by six inches. I needed a hideout. I chose the unknown door directly opposite from
the door to my classroom.
I entered a dark
space. When my eyes adjusted, I realized
I was standing on a small metal perforated platform. Steps descended into the
dark space below me. I was on the back
side of the building, where the basement rooms were buried without windows in
the steep bank the school was built on.
I descended the clanging stairs, and found a custodian that worked, or
maybe lived there. I think he stayed there, unless there was a disaster in one
of the bathrooms. I remember he was an older man, somewhere between twenty-
five and my age now. When you’re seven
or eight almost everyone is old. You couldn’t really tell with the one dangling
Edison sized light bulb. He seemed to understand my embarrassing
predicament, and with a hack saw and metal snips, he carefully freed me from the
metal ring thing.
.
I was at least fifteen minutes tardy, but Mrs. Hudson didn’t
send me to the principal’s office. Maybe it was because she had her own
problems. She was the one that often
went to sleep after lunch. She would eat
her sack lunch at her desk, while the class was at lunch in the basement. When we returned, she would read to us from a
book for awhile, and you could see it coming.
Her eyes would droop, and her words would begin to slow down. A few
little preliminary half snores, and then there was not enough oxygen to digest
her sandwich and supply the brain at the same time. Her chin would tilt forward
on her clavicle, and the book would somehow remain open in her hands. She could
stay in this position for ten or fifteen minutes. There were times the worst of
us would quietly flood the hallway, and cavort stupidly in our stolen freedom. We were always prepared to act innocent in
case the principal might suddenly appear at the end of the hallway.
One other little kickball incident revealed something about
my flawed character that’s came up several times in my lifetime. I have a reflex anger response, that doesn’t
quite reach the part of the brain that thinks through the pros and cons of an
action.
One of the rare times in kickball, when someone must have put an extra two ounces of air in the sorry excuse for a ball, I kicked it over the head of the second baseman and it looked like a three baser kick.. Richard Appleby was the second baseman. He had been chattering some nasty baseball epithets, and getting away with it, since the teacher on playground duty was on another part of the playground. As I rounded second base he said something I won’t repeat about my mother, and I punched him in the nose hard enough to give him a
I don’t remember any punishment.
Today we’d have a lawsuit. Looking back I wonder if I was given a pass more
often than not, because of the publicity of my dad dying in a plane wreck. The
teachers might have felt sympathy for me. I never really thought before now about
what neighbors and teachers were thinking. It might be why I was able to walk
into the Calico Cat Saloon and sell Boy Scout Round-Up tickets to men at the
bar who never intended to go. Maybe it’s
why the Inner City Press covered Ruthie and me setting up a Kool-Aid stand on
the street. Newsworthy? I think not.
That reporter was probably the one that set up the fund drive for my
mother after the accident. She may have
also been the reporter that covered the back yard talent show I set up. It was
woefully short of talent. I charged neighbor kids a quarter, to primarily watch
my dog sit up and roll over. I also tried to play the marines hymn on my
trumpet. Worst of all is realizing those Fairmount Pet
Parade Trophies might not have been totally deserved. The parade was in part sponsored by the
Fairmount Studebaker dealership that donated a car to raffle off after my dad’s
plane accident.
The electrons are jumping again, so
a little more about third grade. I was failing. I hated kickball, but I loved
the other playground activities more than schoolwork. We had all the dangerous
equipment, a merry-go-round you couldn’t stop, and a tooth chipping jungle gym.
“Run through” in the morning
on the back playground involved any, and everybody that wanted in. All grades, mostly boys. Simple Rules.
Start with two catchers in the middle of the big playground. Nobody wanted to be a catcher. Everyone
wanted to be a runner. Object was to run from one end of the playground to the
far end without being tagged. Then back
again. When you were tagged you became a catcher. Eventually you had a lot of catchers and only
a few runners, and a few cheaters who had been tagged already, or who had waited
on the sidelines till the end. I loved
this simple game – nothing like kickball.
I also made friends, some of them
rough, and not just around the edges.
Melvin Cook and I had shin kicking contests. He was a short stocky kid that could kick
like a mule. It had simple rules like
run- through. You stand face to face, with enough room in-between to get a good kick.
You look each other in the eyes.
You take turns kicking each other in the shins. If you flinch, or react in any way verbally or
physically, you lose. It didn’t really
catch on. Come to think of it, it was
mostly Melvin and me. After we bonded, I
visited him at his home at the end of Cedar,where you entered the woods that
led to the Missouri River . He slept primarily in an old sedan without
wheels that sat in the front yard. It
was in better shape than the broken windowed house. Melvin was accused of stealing a sack lunch
later that year. The inquiry kept all of
us in the classroom past the lunch hour.
He didn’t steal it,as it turned out.
It was a girl that was almost as poor.
Ralph Brackstail was another rough character, outlandish and funny. He
conducted loud open ended bartering sessions in the lunch room, where you trade
your peanut butter sandwich for an ice cream cup, or your celery sticks for
chocolate chip cookies. Ralph always
ended up with the good stuff. I always wondered
what happened to Ralph as an adult. Wall
Street, an Auction House, or maybe acting on the big screen. He wasn’t actually a shin kicking close
friend, but I wanted to be like him, the center of attention. I got my chance.
There were two intersections in
front of school that required school safeties to stop traffic. One was at the intersection of Home
Street and Kentucky ,
and the other at Cedar and Kentucky .
The safety crossings were a block apart. School Safety was an appointment by the
principal. I would think character
traits like maturity and responsibility would be key factors in the
selection. The job came with a wide
white belt and a white band , that extended from it up and over the
shoulder. The job also came with a red
and white flag. It was a heady ego trip, to have the power to stop adults in their
vehicles, by simply extending the flag out into the traffic lane as you
shepherded school mates across Kentucky Avenue . Kentucky
was a corridor for Sugar Creekers headed to jobs in the Kansas City.
Ralph was always in character, being
Ralph, and I watched him at his post. He
introduced a new twist to the job of school safety. When he had an audience, he
would pretend like the cars had run over his foot. He would lie down by the road and grab his
foot in pantomimed agony. Only Ralph
could make this funny. I envied the
attention he got from his school age bystanders. He was smart enough to let the
cars pass before he started his antics.
I was not. Not the brightest shining bulb, I was caught the very first
time. My job lasted for three days, six
crossings. Three before school, and three after. The principal had a
disappointed sad look as he relieved me of my sash and flag. It wasn’t my finest hour. I realize now that my
status as a half orphaned son of a hard working widow gave me another Get
Out of Jail Card, I don’t think Mr.
Maclin ever told my mother.
I really miss being a kid in the
fifties.
.