Category Archives: Long-term Memories

Confessions of a Junior Beatle

On the heals of selling a million copies of “I Want to Hold Your Hand” the Beatles flew from Heathrow Airport to JFK on February 7, 1964 to officially begin the “British Invasion” of American pop-culture.  Three thousand adoring fans greeted their arrival.  Two days later, they appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show, pulling in the largest television audience ever recorded (at that time) with 73 million viewers.

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Reporters panned their brash sound and critics spoke derogatorily about their long hair, as if it were a threat to their way of life (they may have had a point there).  Despite this, the “fab four,” as they were dubbed, drew mobs at their first U.S. concert gig at the Washington Coliseum one day later.

By April, twelve of their songs made the Billboard “Hot 100,” five of them held the top five slots.  Everywhere they appeared young women would weep and scream and swoon and (as bizarre as it sounds), chase them.  Seriously.  They would chase them – and if they caught them – they would try to rip off pieces of their clothing.  It was called, “Beatlemania.”

I was eight at the time.  And I was a Junior Beatle.

Now being a Junior Beatle was not some sort of traditional fan club sort of thing – where you send in your name to get a membership card and a signed photograph – it was a product of our own invention.  Four of us in the fourth grade: Donny O’Hagen, Rich Nalven, Michael Harrington and I, each channeled one of the fab four and performed every recess under the trees just outside the Todd School Gymnasium.

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I was John, Donny: Paul (only because he was left-handed), Rich: Ringo and Michael: George.  We each took our positions in exactly the same order as the real Beatles had appeared on the Ed Sullivan Show and sang the hell out of “I Want to Hold Your Hand,”  “Twist and Shout,”  “I Saw Her Standing There,” and “Do You Want to Know a Secret?”

None of us could play an instrument, but most of us could sing.  So, we air-guitared our way through every riff.  We shook our heads, our butts and sang the harmonies with all the requisite “Ooooo’s” and the screams and “yeah, yeah, yeahs.”

And like the Beatles, we were surrounded by girls.  At eight, I wasn’t sure this was such a good thing, but every recess we had a ready made-audience of 15 or so of my female classmates who would squeal their way through the entire set and chase us (I’m not making this up) all the way around Todd Field trying to kiss us and tear apart our clothes until we agreed to sing another song.  (If only I had used this lesson later on in life when it mattered!)

It didn’t end well.  My mom and the school administration didn’t like all that girl/boy stuff contaminating the fourth grade so they made us stop.  But for a brief and shining moment, we were Junior Beatles.  And it was glorious. Yeah.  Yeah.  Yeah.

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English 5

Unknown

“Welcome to English 5.”  A small sardonic smile lit Professor Ermarth’s face, suggesting a deeper meaning than her words conveyed.  In the innocence of my youth, however, I ignored any instinct to run, took my seat in Sanborn House, and flipped open my college-lined, spiral notebook.

Every student at Dartmouth was required to take English 5, preferably in the first year of study.  And having a profound fear of writing, I figured I would stress less if I took the course fall term and got the requirement out of the way.  It was the first class I attended and seemed pretty tame until Professor Ermarth closed her book at the end of class. “Your first assignment, due Monday, is to write a five page paper on the first four chapters of Paradise Lost.”

Have you ever read Paradise Lost?  Not an easy thing to decipher, much less about which to write. Turns out, we had to write one paper each week.  The good news was, that if we didn’t like the grade we received, we had the option to rewrite the paper – as many times as we’d desired.  The only grade that would count would be the last version submitted.

Although anxious about the volume of writing, this sounded feasible to my seventeen-year old, virgin ears.  I spent the next few days deciphering the first four chapters of Paradise Lost, wrote my paper and called home to tell my folks that all was well.

And it was, until I got back the graded paper.  It was covered in ink.  Every sentence was edited – several times.  “Wrong word choice.” “This makes no sense.” “You already said this.”

I got a “D+” – not the way I planned to start my college career.

After a few bouts of despair, I took solace from the fact that others had received similar grades. I also knew I could rewrite the paper to receive a new grade. I already had another paper due, however, and from Ermarth’s comments on the first paper, it was clear the second paper wouldn’t fare much better than its predecessor.  I had to redraft my second paper as well as the first – and in those days we had to type everything on a typewriter that had no self-correcting features (we used liquid paper to cover our mistakes).  I put in a few late nights to catch up.

I got a “C-” on the rewrite and no grade on the second paper.

“What’s on the pages seems much ado about a small point, namely that the form of the work is a device to involve the reader.  This is true of any work in any language, and so in effect you say nothing in saying this.  The language isn’t bad, considering how hard it is to write well without an argument to develop…much of your argument here is merely assertion, which of course is no argument at all.”

Ermarth had given us the opportunity to suggest our grade.  I had given myself a B-.

“Your evaluation seems optimistic.”

I called home in a panic.  I was in over my head.  Even after my Dad’s pep-talk – “They wouldn’t have let you in if they didn’t think you could do the work.” – I wasn’t so sure.

I went back to writing, now with a new third paper and two re-writes behind it.  I began to think the professor was sadistic – until I realized that she had to grade every paper we submitted.  Okay, so I figured, maybe sadomasochistic.

I got to the point where I was writing or re-writing (and typing) a paper each night.  And I, who never had gotten a “C” in my life, was relieved to get a “C+” on any of my first drafts.

I rewrote the Lost paper five times (for an A-/B+, thank you).  I rewrote one on Camus’s The Fall four times (never choose an existentialist subject with an English professor) and was relieved to get away with a gracious C+.

Needless to say, English 5 did nothing to help my fear of writing. After ten weeks of sweating through paper after paper, I ended the term with an exhausting B+.  It was the last English class I took at Dartmouth. As you can imagine, I now consider this an enormous personal loss.  Dartmouth had some of the finest English professors (including Ermarth) on the planet.  More risk averse than I am today, I was foolish and cowardly to pass them by.

I still have a fear of writing, although it is less pronounced than it was during my freshman year at college.  I could not have imagined then, during those early autumn walks to class in Sanborn House, that I would wind up a writer. But, somewhere in the back of my mind, I must have had my suspicions.  There are only four files from my days at Dartmouth still in my writing desk.  Ermarth’s edits of my English 5 papers is one of them.

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Long-term Memories

UnknownThanksgivings are for memories.  Here’s one.

We used to wrestle with my father.  And despite the fact that we had numbers on our side, it was always a suicide mission.  We’d throw ourselves at his great tree-trunk legs, trying to bring him down and he would swat us aside like Godzilla dispensing with the Japanese army.

Eventually, he would end up on the floor (probably to prevent crushing one of us) and we would swarm over him, Lilliputians trying to hold him down.  In the end, he would stack us up, one on top of the other, holding us down with one hand while tickling us with the other.   He would laugh until tears came out of his eyes.

As we grew older, we could compete on size as well as strength. And there were more of us – six to be exact – with my sister Jean and my youngest brother Bean, every bit a part of the carnage. My older brothers and I would leap off chairs and the living room couch to cling to my father’s back while the littler ones tried to trip up his legs.  I distinctly remember my mother positioning herself in front of the new color television set to ensure that no one put a foot through it.

It was still a one-sided affair.  My dad had this ju-jitsu-style move he had learned in the Marine Corps that he employed to overcome any and all attacks.  No one was immune.  His hands would spin in an odd-figure eight maneuver and we were forever at his mercy.  It always ended the same – bodies strewn everywhere – all of us collapsed in laughter.

Now that we are grown, agreement is rare in my family.  We don’t share the same political views, work in the same profession or even all practice the same religion. Some live on the east coast, some on the west, some in the north, some in the south.  “All Chiefs, no Indians,” my mother often says.

Yet deep down, we know we are still connected – indelibly bonded by a decades-old, suicide mission to wrestle my father to the ground and make him laugh until the tears came out of his eyes.   We few. We very few…

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