***Blowing In The Wind - With Bob Dylan Song In Mind
Scene: Clintondale Meadows, late September 1962. The features of the place already described above, including its underutilization. Enter Johnny Prescott from the north, plaid shirt, brow loafers, no pennies on this pair, black un-cuffed chinos, and against the winds of late September this year his Clintondale High white and blue sports jacket won for his athletic prowess in sophomore year. Theodore White’s The Making Of A President-1960 in hand. Enter from the south Peggy Kelly radiant in her cashmere sweater, her just so full skirt, and her black patent leather shoes with her additional against the chill winds red and black North Clintondale varsity club supporter sweater. James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain in hand. Johnny spied Peggy first, makes an initial approach as he did to most every girl every chance he got, but noticed, noticed at a time when such things were important in Clintondale teen high school live the telltale red and black sweater, and immediately backed off. Peggy noticing Johnny’s reaction puts her head down. A chance encounter goes for not.
****
That is not the end of the story though. Johnny and Peggy will “meet” again, by chance, in the Port Authority Bus Station in New York City in 1964 as they, along with other recent high school graduates, “head south.”
Scene: Girls’ Lounge, North Clintondale High School, Monday
morning before school, late September, 1962. Additional information for those
who know not of girls lounges, for whatever reason. The North Clintondale High
School girls’ lounge was reserved strictly for junior and senior girls, no
sophomore girls and, most decidedly, no freshmen girls need come within twenty
feet of the place for any reason, particularly by accident, under penalty of
tumult. It was placed there for the “elect” to use before school, during lunch,
after school, and during the day if the need arise for bathroom breaks, but
that last was well down on the prerogatives list since any girl can use any
other “lav” in the school. No queen, no lioness ever guarded her territory as
fiercely as the junior and senior girls of any year, not just 1962, guarded the
aura of their lounge. Needless to say the place was strictly off-limits to
boys, although there had been talk, if talk it was, about some girls thinking,
or maybe better, wishing, that boys could enter, after school enter. That
possibility was in any case much more likely than entry by those sophomore and
freshman girls, lost or not.
Now the reasoning behind this
special girls’ lounge, at least according to Clintondale public school authority
wisdom established so far back no one remembered who started it, although a
good guess was sometime in the Jazz Age, the time of the “lost generation,” was
that junior and senior girls needed some space to attend to their toilet and to
adjust to the other rigors of the girl school day and, apparently, that fact
was not true for the younger girls. So for that “as far back as can be
remembered” junior and senior girls have been using the lounge for their
physical, spiritual, demonic, and other intrigue needs.
Now the physical set- up of the
place, by 1962 anyway, was that of a rather run-down throne-ante room. Remember
as well this was situated in a public school so erase any thoughts of some
elegant woman’s lounge in some fancy downtown Clintondale hotel, some Ritz-ish
place. Within that huge multi-windowed space there were several well-used,
sagging, faded couches, a few ratty single chairs, some mirrors in need of some
repair and a good cleaning and a few wastepaper baskets of various sizes.
Attached to this room was a smaller room, the bathroom itself with stalls,
sinks, mirrors, etc. the same as found in any rest room in any public building
in the country. The “charm” of the place was thus in its exclusivity not its
appearance.
Come Monday morning, any school day
Monday morning, the ones that count, and the place was sure to be jam-packed
with every girl with a story to tell, re-tell, or discount as the case may be.
Also needless to say, and it took no modern sociologist, no sociologist of
youth culture, post-World War II youth culture, to figure it out in even such an
elitist democratic lounge there was a certain pecking order, or more aptly
cliques. The most vocal one, although the smallest, was composed of the “bad”
girls, mainly working- class, or lower, mostly Irish and Italian,
cigarette-smoking, blowing the smoke out the window this September day as the
weather was still good enough to have open windows. As if the nervous,
quick-puff stale smells of the cigarettes were not permanently telltale-etched
on the stained walls already, it would take no bloodhound to figure out the No Smoking rule was being violated,
violated daily. Oh yes, and those “bad” girls just then were chewing gum,
chewing Wrigley’s double-mint gum, although that ubiquitous habit was not
confined to bad girls, as if that act would take the smell of the cigarette
away from their breathes. One girl, Anna, a usually dour pretty girl, was
animatedly talking, without a seeming hint of embarrassment or concern that
others would hear about how her new boyfriend, a biker from Adamsville who to
hear her tell it was an A- Number One stud, and she “did it” over on the
Adamsville Beach (she put it more graphically, much more graphically, but the
reader can figure that out). And her listeners, previously somewhat sullen, perked
up as she went into the details, and they started, Monday morning or not, to
get a certain glean in their eyes thinking about the response when they told
their own boyfriends about this one.
Less vocal, but certainly not more
careful in their weekend doings talk, were the, for lack of a better term, the
pom-pom girls, the school social leaders, the ones who planned the school
dances and such, and put the events together in order to, no, not show their
superior organizing skills, but to lure boys, the jock and social boys, into
their own Adamsville beach traps. And not, like Anna and her biker, on any
smelly, sandy, clamshell-filled, stone-wretched beach, blanket-less for christ
sakes. Leave that for the “bad” girls. They, to a girl, were comfortably snuggled
up, according to their whispered stories, in the back seat of a boss ’57 Chevy
or other prestige car, with their honeys and putting it more gingerly than Anna
(and less graphically) “doing it.”
And, lastly, was the group around
Peggy Kelley, not that she was the leader of this group for it had no leader,
or any particular organized form either, but because when we get out of the
smoke-filled, sex talk-filled, hot-air Monday morning before school North
Clintondale junior and senior girls’ lounge we will be following her around.
This group, almost all Irish girls, Irish Catholic girls if that additional
description is needed, of varying respectabilities, was actually there to
attend to their toilet and prepare for the rigors of the girl school day. Oh
yes, after all what is the point of being in this exclusive, if democratic,
lounge anyway, they too were talking in very, very, very quiet tones discussing
their weekend doings, their mainly sexless weekend doings, although at least
one, Dora, was speaking just a bit too cryptically, and with just a little too
much of a glean in her eyes to pass churchly muster.
And what of Peggy? Well Peggy had
her story to tell, if she decided to tell it which she had no intention of
doing that day. She was bothered, with an unfocused bother, but no question a
bother about other aspects of her life, about what she was going to do with her
life , about her place in the world to than to speak of sex. It was not that
Peggy didn’t like sex, or rather more truthfully, the idea of sex, or maybe
better put on her less confused days, the idea of the idea of sex. Just this
past weekend, Saturday night, although it was a book sealed with seven seals
that she was determined not to speak of, girls’ lounge or not, she had let Pete
Rizzo “feel her up,” put his hands on her breast. No, not skin on skin, jesus
no, but through her buttoned-up blouse. And she liked it. And moreover, she
thought that night, that tossing and turning night, “when she was ready” she
was would be no prude about it. When she was ready, and that is why she
insisted that the idea of the idea of sex was something that would fall into
place. When she was ready.
But as she listened to the other
Irish girls and their half-lies about their weekends, or drifted off into her
own thoughts sex, good idea or not, was not high on her list of activities just
then. Certainly not with Pete. Pete was a boy that she had met when she was
walking at “the meadows,” For those not familiar with the Clintondale Meadows
this was a well-manicured and preserved former pasture area that the town
fathers had designated as a park, replete with picnic tables, outdoor barbecue
pits, a small playground area and a small restroom. The idea was to preserve a
little of old-time farm country Clintondale in the face of all the building
going on in town. But for Peggy the best part was that on any given day no one
was using the space, preferring the more gaudy, raucous and, well, fun-filled
Gloversville Amusement Park, a couple of towns over. And so she could roam
there freely, and that seemed be Pete’s idea, as well one day. And that meeting
really set up what was bothering Peggy these days.
Pete was a freshman at the small
local Gloversville College. Although it was small and had been, according to
Pete, one of those colleges founded by religious dissidents, Protestant
religious dissidents from the mainstream Protestantism of their day, it was
well-regarded academically (a fact also courtesy of Pete). And that was Pete’s
attraction, his ideas and how he expressed them. They fit right in with what
Peggy had been bothered by for a while. Some things that could not be spoken of
in the girls’ lounge, or maybe even thought of in there. Things like what to do
about the black civil rights struggle that was burning up the television every
night. (Pete was “heading south” next summer he said.) Things like were we
going to last until next week if the Russians came at us, or we went after the
Russians.
Also things like why was she worried
every day about her appearance and why she, like an addiction, always, always,
made her way to the girls’ lounge to “make her face” as part of the rigors of
the girl school day. And that whole sex thing that was coming, and she was glad
of it, just not with Pete, Pete who after all was just too serious, too much
like those commissars over in Russia, although she liked the way he placed his
hands on her. And she was still thinking hard on these subjects as she excused
herself from the group as she put the final touches of lipstick on. Just then the
bell rang for first period, and she was off into the girl day.
Scene:
Boys’ “Lav,” Second Floor, Clintondale High School, Monday morning before
school, September, 1962. (Not necessarily the same Monday morning as the scene
above but some Monday after the first Monday, Labor Day, in September. In any
case even if it was the same Monday as the one above that coincidence does not
drive this story, other more ethereal factors do.) Additional information for
those who know not of boys’ lavs, for whatever reason. The Clintondale High
School boys’ rest rooms, unlike the girls’ lounge mentioned above at North, or
where a similar rule applied to the girls’ lounge at Clintondale, was open to
any boy in need of its facilities, even lowly, pimply freshmen as long as they
could take the gaffe. Apparently Clintondale high school boys, unlike the
upperclassmen girls needed no special consideration for their grooming needs in
order to face the schoolboy day.
Well, strictly speaking that
statement about a truly democratic boys’ lav universe was not true. The first
floor boys’ lav down by the woodworking shop was most strictly off limits, and
had been as far back as anyone could remember, maybe Neanderthal times, to any
but biker boys, bad-ass corner boys, guys with big chips on their shoulders and
the wherewithal to keep them there , and assorted other toughs. No geeks,
dweebs, nerds, guys in plaid shirts and loafers with or without pennies
inserted in them, or wannabe toughs, wannabe toughs who did not have that
wherewithal to maintain that chip status need apply. And none did, none at
least since legendary corner boy king (Benny’s Variety version), “Slash”
Larkin, threw some misdirected freshman through a work-working shop window for
his mistake. Ever since every boy in the school, every non-biker, non-corner
boy, or non-tough had not gone within fifty yards of that lav, even if they
took shop classes in the area. And a “comic” aspect of every year’s freshman
orientation was a guided finger to point out which lav not to use, and that
window where that freshman learned the error of his ways. No king, no lion ever
guarded his territory as fiercely as the “bad” boys did. Except, maybe, those
junior and senior Clintondale girls of any year, and not just 1962, as they
guarded their lounge lair.
That left the boys’ rooms on the
second floor, the third floor, the one as you entered the gymnasium, and the
one outside of the cafeteria for every other boy’s use. A description, a short
description, of these lavs is in order. One description fits all will suffice;
a small room, with stalls, sinks, mirrors, etc. the same as found in any rest
room in any public building in the country. Additionally, naturally, several
somewhat grimy, stained (from the “misses”) urinals. What draws our attention
to the second floor boys’ room this day are two facts. First, this rest room is
in the back of the floor away from snooping teachers’ eyes, ears and noses and
has been known, again for an indeterminate time, as the place where guys could
cadge a smoke, a few quick puffs anyway, on a cigarette and blow the smoke out
the back window, rain or shine, cold or hot weather. So any guy of any class
who needed his fix found his way there. And secondly, today, as he had done
almost every Monday before school since freshman year John Prescott and friends
have held forth there to speak solemnly of the weekend’s doing, or not doings.
To speak of sex, non-sex, and more often than seemed possible, of the girl who
got away, damn it.
Of course, egalitarian democratic or
not, even such drab places as schoolboy rest rooms have their pecking orders,
and the second floor back tended to eliminate non-smoking underclassmen,
non-smokers in general, serious intellectual types, non-jocks, non-social
butterflies, and non-plaid shirt and loafer boys. And Johnny Prescott, if
nothing else was the epitome of the plaid shirt and loafer crowd. And just like
at that up-scale North Clintondale girls’ lounge come Monday morning, any
school day Monday morning, the ones that count, and the place was sure to be
jam-packed with every plaid-shirted, penny-loafered boy with a story to tell,
re-tell, or discount as the case may be.
Also needless to say, and it took no
modern sociologist, no sociologist of youth culture, post-World War II youth
culture, to figure it out in even such a smoky democratic setting there was a
certain standardized routine-ness to these Monday mornings. And that
routine-ness, the very fact of it, is why on John Prescott draws our attention
this day.
And if Johnny was the king of his
clique for no other reason than he was smart, but not too smart, not
intellectual smart, or showing it any way, that he was first to wear plaid and
loafers and not be laughed at, and he had no trouble dating girls, many notched
girls, which was the real sign of distinction in second floor lav, he was a
troubled plaid-ist.
No, not big troubled, but, no
question, troubled. Troubled about this sex thing, and about having to have the
notches to prove it, whether, to keep up appearances, you had to lie about it
or not when you struck out as happened to Johnny more times than he let on (and
as he found out later happened to more guys more often than not). Troubled
about political stuff like what was going on down in the South with those black
kids taking an awful beating every day as he watched on television every
freaking night. And right next store in Adamsville where some kids, admittedly
some intellectual goof kids, were picketing Woolworth’s every Saturday to let
black people, not in Adamsville because there were no blacks in Adamsville, or
Clintondale for that matter, but down in Georgia, eat a cheese sandwich in
peace at a lunch counter and he thought he should do something about that too,
except those intellectual goofs might goof on him.
And big, big issues like whether we
were going to live out our lives as anything but mutants on this planet what
with the Russian threatening us everywhere with big bombs, and big communist
one-size-fits- all ideas. Worst, though were the dizzying thoughts of his place
in the sun and how big it would be. Worst, right now worst though was to finish
this third morning cigarette and tell his girl, his third new girl in two
months, Julie James, that he needed some time this weekend to just go off by
himself, “the meadows” maybe, and think about the stuff he had on his mind.
******* Scene: Clintondale Meadows, late September 1962. The features of the place already described above, including its underutilization. Enter Johnny Prescott from the north, plaid shirt, brow loafers, no pennies on this pair, black un-cuffed chinos, and against the winds of late September this year his Clintondale High white and blue sports jacket won for his athletic prowess in sophomore year. Theodore White’s The Making Of A President-1960 in hand. Enter from the south Peggy Kelly radiant in her cashmere sweater, her just so full skirt, and her black patent leather shoes with her additional against the chill winds red and black North Clintondale varsity club supporter sweater. James Baldwin’s Go Tell It On The Mountain in hand. Johnny spied Peggy first, makes an initial approach as he did to most every girl every chance he got, but noticed, noticed at a time when such things were important in Clintondale teen high school live the telltale red and black sweater, and immediately backed off. Peggy noticing Johnny’s reaction puts her head down. A chance encounter goes for not.
****
That is not the end of the story though. Johnny and Peggy will “meet” again, by chance, in the Port Authority Bus Station in New York City in 1964 as they, along with other recent high school graduates, “head south.”
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