4 Trying College - High Level Research
Transcription
4 Trying College - High Level Research
The BS years To go on from here I can’t use words; they don’t mean enough. — Marty Balin/Paul Kantner, Surrealistic Pillow. T he venture to Needles during the summer after my high school graduation ended with my aunt dropping me off at the south rim of the Grand Canyon, where I spent the whole day just looking out from one place on the rock railing, following the light shifts on the magnificent display of naturally cut stone. As sunset approached, I boarded the Santa Fe train that still ran from the rim to Williams Junction, Arizona, allowing about the most glorious departure possible, watching the Canyon’s reds change from the open observation platform as our train pulled slowly away. After a four-hour delay in the packed little transfer station, the Chief took me on to Denver, along the way having my first ever cup of coffee, good stuff from Fred Harvey, on a railroad that had not yet lost its classiness. I had chosen Colorado State U. for college, because I wanted to get fairly far away from home, preferably in the West, and because my cousin, Marilyn Doig, taught math there, a subject that I knew was likely to give me grief. Her presence also encouraged my parents to allow this schooling choice. In retrospect, that was not very profound reasoning, but my rather arbitrary choice turned out to have some surprising advantages, not least some genuinely first-class exposures to art, foreign films, music, and the theater. Despite being a state school, here was even some pretty decent architecture around, with Fort Collins then being still small enough then to get around within, and out of, easily. As among the fastest growing cities in the U.S., it has since become a very different place. Having lived there allowed me to monitor what that growth has meant, not least the differences sharply divergent topography makes, by limiting almost all of that growth to the original center’s south and east. When I started there, my vague goal had been to enter the field of medicine, inspired in part by Albert Schweitzer. Penn State, my father’s college, had been ready to try out an accelerated medical program the year following my high school graduation, accepting just ten students. I had applied, and was ranked number 11, but all ten ahead of me chose to accept their invitations. Instead, being a pre-med major at CSU did allow for a lot of flexibility in course choices, which I took full advantage of, harvesting enough chemistry and physics to keep the core going, but also exploring enlightening alternatives like “Literature of Social Protest”, whose readings remain important to my thinking, and “History of the Medieval Church”, along with classes in poetry, art history, and theater. When I arrived, the school had mishandled my application scores, resulting in them considering me capable of honors courses only in mathematics. That was a double error, since, although I’d had a bit of advanced training in high school, formal proofs were both uninteresting and difficult for me, and not amenable to tutoring, so that I was left far behind in a group of a dozen or so zealots the first quarter, receiving a generous D for the outing. However, after two quarters of being so clearly ahead of the rest in classes including several hundred in history, and smaller but still large groups in literature, I was invited to join honors groups in both, as well as in chemistry, complete with an apology from the program head for their initial screw-up. That freshman year was even more actively formatted around interactions in the all-male dormitory where I resided. Having been socially isolated in high school, I had resolved that, to expand my horizons, I would establish as much of a friendship as possible with every Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college single resident on my floor. I was pretty successful at this, eventually being elected to the dorm council, and gaining a considerable number of useful insights along the way. Besides the conversation and many evenings at local near-beer establishments, I also occasionally managed to study, went to some movies and concerts alone, and listened to tapes in the adjacent library, which had a wonderful reel-to-reel set of all of Samuel Barber’s work. Jack Knopinski was among the residents of Braiden Hall at CSU during that year of trying to get to know everyone. Jack had modified a 1959 VW Beetle by replacing its original engine with one from a Porsche. With this available, three of us hatched the idea of skiing for a day at Crested Butte, outside Gunnison, where Jack’s sister was at school We quite memorably did most of Wolf Creek Pass, the one most famous for its truck wrecks, executing 360s (full circle spins), which, in that car one could enter or exit at will, along the way. The ski area being quite a long run from Fort Collins, we had to leave at something like 2 AM. That VW still had a six-volt generator, strong enough to run either the headlights or the radio, but not both. For much of the night, having moonlit snow and little traffic around, we listened. Earlier in the year, my uncle Jerome had shown me the trick of how headlights were not always necessary in the desert, allowing me to make that suggestion to my companions. A couple of years later, I regularly repeated that trick coming back from Boulder, in my first Volvo, on what was then back road towards Lyons. That eventually underlined how times change, since what was then a solitary narrow run is now four lanes wide, on which one could not even imagine being alone, or fail to be blinded by wasteful artificial lighting, thereby being unable to have time to adapt to seeing the road when the moon’s glow is naturally available. Heading back to Fort Collins, though, in early 1966 from Gunnison, after the long trip to the slopes and a good day’s skiing in intense cold, we found a need for more heat in the VW, so Jack stuffed a Kleenex box in the dysfunctional flapper valve in the “stale air” (called that by mechanics because the newer models were touting their “fresh air” system), which was near the exhaust. Too near it, turned out. About 20 miles past Buena Vista, the cardboard tissue box, and then the engine’s external fuel supply caught fire. There was no snow immediately nearby, so we put the flames out with dirt, which kept the engine from restarting. Someone gave us a lift back to town, in a 1955 Pontiac, which felt amazingly warm, commodious, and comfortable after the old VW bug. We found a room in a vintage hotel for the $5 we had left between us. That got us a single twin bed, in which three guys tried to sleep. The overall space was so narrow that we two outside guys could stay on only by pressing our arms against the wall, having put the biggest among us in the middle. The real rub came the next morning, when we tried to hitchhike back to where we had left the car. After a couple of fruitless hours, we realized that Buena Vista was the site of Colorado’s maximum security prison, so three now thoroughly scruffy males could forget thumbing successfully for a ride. We walked back to the nearest gas station, where I talked someone filling up into giving us a lift, by telling our story in a humorous, but believable, way. We cleaned out the carburetor, with its paper air cleaner having burned up and the dirt then filled the openings, by taking it off and pissing through it, not having any other water available. We finally made it back without further incident. My grades wallowed the next year, in concert with a bout of mononucleosis, which thankfully allowed me to drop a woefully taught section of analytical chemistry. The instructors made it perfectly clear that the weight of a fingerprint would be enough to ruin the results, while not giving (at least clearly enough for me) the necessary information about how one could get or keep the glassware sufficiently clean. Whatever value I may have, it is clearly not in being accurate to the nearest ten-thousandth of a gram. The mono excuse did 37 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college not let me escape a final F in third quarter calculus, however. That instructor was willing to give me a D, but sufficiently frustrated with the course, I refused to show up for the final, unwilling even to see him again. Many years would pass before I was able to appreciate the usefulness of calculus in problem solving, and I still wonder how the message of its potential usefulness and techniques could be delivered more effectively. The mono itself did result in the useful pleasure of being apologized to by the entire health clinic staff, following their set of botched lab tests, something that has forever made me rightfully doubtful of the accuracy of such things, even when the testers are trying hard. A couple more connections from childhood came together during that bout with mono. I had gotten terrified of needles during the repeated injections for the 1954 Salk polio vaccine trials, coincidentally making the front page of our local newspaper when a photographer covering them chose my reaction as the outstanding bad example, to pair with an ever-somuch-more-tolerant young lady. Weekly blood-letting from my narrow and hard-to-find veins, and a patient health-care staff, got me over that one, though never to the point of replacing my native distaste for getting “stuck”. That kept another of those sharp intentional boundaries, this one neatly circumscribing experimentation with outside-of-prescription drugs. Skin remained a barrier not to be trifled with, since that evolved with a lot of rather obvious good reasons, interestingly suggesting that medicine was often not itself respectful enough of it, as later issues have underlined, but remain underappreciated. That time in the clinic also overlapped with another unusual bit of father-son bonding During my childhood, Syracuse had a “technology club”, whose meetings my father had attended for many years. He regularly took me along as soon as I was of sufficient age not become a disturbance, which, in my case, was pretty young. I particularly remember one session where its presenter plotted out how the lead in pipes and drinking vessels helped bring down the Romans. Perhaps the most spectacular meeting, though, was a dramatic slide projection of “K2, the Savage Mountain”, about an unsuccessful climbing attempt. That, along with the National Geographic illustrations from the somewhat easier time of Edmund Hillary and companions on Everest, made me a fantasy climber. At the small college clinic in 1967 where I was receiving erstwhile treatment for mono was another whom I spent a bit of time alongside. He was doing therapy as best one could for gangrenous toes, a consequence of being trapped too long on Mt. McKinley. Further thoughts of climbing from that point on were always for far more benign circumstances, a good thing given that once I got glasses, allowing me to see more in 3D, they revealed that my already known claustrophobia was balanced by a considerable discomfort from immediately visible heights. Meanwhile, I had done well enough with some of the other chemistry courses, albeit often by my capabilities in manipulating the instructors to give sufficient clues about what responses should be, something I had long been able to do for other tests. Getting by without full comprehension of what was supposed to be known by being able to guess what the tester is subtly suggesting is most likely to be the wanted answer has been a lifelong "skill". In organic chemistry, it provided a part-time undergraduate research job, until I eventually proved that I was hopeless at effectively synthesizing di-tertiary-butyl pyridine. That attempt did get me thoroughly exposed to yet another lot of hazardous chemicals that now are required to be handled with a lot more care than anyone used then in that lab. A summer job was soon to provide much more. I added to that collected risk in a more strictly parallel way a few years later, during an abortive follow-up in the lab to a marginally successful idea of mine to destroy naturally 38 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college occurring toxins in foods by exposing them to concentrated sunlight. I messed around a bit with some concentrated aflatoxins, a common contaminant of peanuts, and a potent creator of liver cancer long after exposure. Even with such a known danger, I was not as careful as I should have been, like many others, in our youth considering 25 years ahead too far away to worry about. The increasingly poor quality environment from fluorescent lighting in the laboratories themselves made them ever more uncomfortable places for me, which subtly increased my haste in what I did there. I suspect it does the same for others, too, decreasing the quality of all work done within them, or elsewhere under similarly hostile glare. The deeper problem of labs for me became more slowly apparent. Although I could carry off particular tasks reasonably well, that was all there was. I was neither especially competent at their detail, nor could I visualize effectively enough what was happening within what anyone could see on the surface. I strongly felt, and still feel, a need to be creative, to reach further than others have, to fit pieces together better, to reveal something new. From what I could do in the lab, which was just hanging on, simply trying to replicate what someone else had done, I could not imagine being able to extrapolate a discovery. That might have happened if I’d kept after it, for I did eventually figure out calculus to a better extent, but the odds did not feel sufficient then, and they still do not. Replication, though, with its little hints of retained magic, was sufficient for my father, as it is for most people. It beat the hell out of subsistence farming, with all its limits and vagaries. He did make revelations, in the form of solving small mysteries, by working within a fixed set of rules and seeing what made the most sense among a set of possibilities. There is nothing inherently wrong with that way of spending one’s days, of course. They are very much like growing crops, building objects, or fixing things, all of which I do enjoy, so can readily appreciate how others find complete enough satisfaction from them to make a life focus. That was rarely enough for me. I had always wanted to see behind the curtain, whether it is one put up by a human or pre-existing, with an assumption of achieving a potentially higher value from trying. M y own first car came after two years of higher ed, as a tangential, but direct, result of paired typical youthful errors on my part. At 19, I was working as a watchman for my father’s company in Solvay during CSU’s summer break. On the night shift, the watch responsibility was to make rounds, every two hours, of the chlorine/caustic and veryhigh-concentration hydrogen peroxide manufacturing sections of the plant. The photograph that will follow is of an adjacent area, in another season and a few years later, but it still gives the general feel of the place. The particular section I worked in eventually became one of the original Superfund toxic cleanup sites, after the facilities in the picture were replaced by more cost effective sodium carbonate production, alongside more direct raw material trona mines in Wyoming. However, beginning far before my time, the Solvay Process used abundant local brine and limestone resources to synthesize that vital material, and those supplies concentrated supplies readily suggested their use for related products. Chlorine was the original poison gas during World War I, and its manufacture most commonly was by electrolysis of brine. In the Solvay factory, gas leaks were routine, and they were only one of many physical hazards. One by-product of the basic process was hydrogen, which can be highly explosive, especially if it perchance met some of the chlorine. This always intensely flammable gas was piped from the mercury cells to further portion of the operation, to be distilled into 50 and 70% hydrogen peroxide, which behaves more interestingly than the still biologically potent 3% stuff found in grocery stores. The guys 39 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college who worked in the peroxide operation joked about converting its maze of all glass piping to distill whiskey instead. Sometime on my rounds, they could be found asleep late at night, but according to their bosses, they knew the proper sounds so well that they would not only waken instantly from any changes, but also know just where to look to deal with the problems. Nevertheless, a sister plant in Buffalo quite literally vanished one night not too long afterwards, taking its operators with it, while another in Louisiana similar to the chlorine portion nearly as spectacularly blew up its building a few years further on, also taking with it several lives. Sodium hydroxide was referred to as "caustic" because it was the pre-eminent example of that class of substances. Its common name, lye, was the other primary product of the chlorine manufacture, which was hardly a pleasure to work with, or around, in itself. The local plant’s production was classified as electrolytic grade, extra-purified to etch circuit boards. I got to know its characteristics in intimate detail when some got by my goggles and into an eye. Luckily, it happened right next to a washing station set up for just that emergency. It was in this plant that am ongoing connection appeared in my life, from my father bringing home paperback copies of J.R.R. Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings. There are probably few better places to fully envision Mordor than reading in the middle of night, surrounded on three sides by the lights of a steaming chlorine/caustic chemical plant, and then to appreciate the contrasts that dawn brought, looking out over native vegetation, even rudely treated, on the other side. Tolkien, for me, has been a companion deserving serious attention, with his more famous writings read at least 20 times over the years. His support writings, including all of his son Christopher’s commentaries, have been purchased and consumed in all their thorough detail. The Peter Jackson movies did not even begin to reveal the books’ depth. The night’s central assignment during my watchman job involved coded keys that were chained in various spots around the facility. Each needed to be inserted into a five-pound, clock driven, paper tape recording device, where they left differently shaped marks to show 40 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college that somebody had checked for anything at least obviously amiss. To speed entries into the many buildings, I got the bright idea to hanging my master door key on a chain outside my pants, having noticed someone doing similarly. A problem arose because I had selected an insufficiently robust set of links, leading to the keychain breaking, just one stop before the end of a round. With the next round being near dawn, I’d have a better chance to find it then, without having to confess an error with a master key to the bosses. Employee theft was a continuing serious issue for the plant supervisors. That option, though, required getting to the last watch key for the round I was on. Seeing that there was a likely reachable and open window above where the marking device was located, I lept up, crawled over the transom, got through, and jumped to the floor. Unfortunately, the heavy recording clock, on its strap, had caught on the latch at the top of my arc. Even more unfortunately, when I looked up to see how it was lodged, the assembly was already on its way down. Since I had begun looking upwards, the clock was able to neatly miss my hard hat and crash full on into my upturned face. When I groggily woke up a few minutes later, I instinctively wiped my hand across my nose, thus spreading the considerable quantity of blood even more widely. When I walked into the office, the poor night-shift bosses woke from their naps to see me looking seriously injured, which indeed was the case, but I didn’t know it yet, thinking my problem was just a badly bloodied schnozz. After telling them about the situation, I sat back with a towel pressed hard against my face, which did stop the bleeding after a while, so I didn’t seek further help. With the advancing natural light, we searched together over the gravel grounds, and found the errant master key. I went home at the end of my shift, at 7 AM, slept for a few hours, but woke with bleeding again. This time, I could not get it to stop. My father had taken one of the family cars to work, and my mother had the other out shopping. I checked with a neighbor, who gave me a lift to the hospital, where an X-ray quickly revealed my nose and adjacent cheek to be broken, in 11 places. After a scramble to find my father for permission to operate, since I wasn’t yet 21, the surgeons crammed my nose full of cocaine, which is the only drug that worked safely that close to the brain, and reset the bones as best they could. The following summer, I got about $400 from workmen’s compensation for “permanent facial disfigurement” for the damage done. The judge had to prod me to ask for any recompense at the routine inquiry, since I could neither readily see the damage in a mirror, nor find blame for anyone but myself. Looking back, however, even though the injury was not obvious from the outside, it created a lifelong problem for me in breathing, especially when stressed, and in proper sinus drainage. It thereby exacerbated the effect of lung damage from chemicals on my native claustrophobia, as well as upon allergies. However, everyone I’ve talked with about trying to right septum damage has argued that further surgery offers no cure. More immediately, that seemingly small sum was twice the asking price of a 1960 Volvo 544 on the used car lot of a local dealership. My father had thought seriously about buying a similar model at the time he acquired the Rambler, but my mother had argued against its stick shift. A friend in my dorm at college had one, loved it, and I had been impressed. That machine definitely was to provide an education, and plenty of adventure. There were yet few Volvos on American roads back then, and the 544 looked like a narrower version of a pre-war Ford. Folks called it a hunchback. I named it Snoopy, because I soon painted Charles Schultz’s flying-scarf-clad dog, on his doghouse, on its dark blue sides. The top and back of this particular Volvo were flat black; the interior had thick red 41 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college and white vinyl. As far as I know, it escaped ever being photographed, since its arrival followed my father’s loss of the Zeiss camera and his relative disinterest in the Minolta bought to replace it, while preceding my own entry into serious photography. The car’s entry into my life was slightly preceded by meeting my eventual wife, which turned out to be second direct acquaintance for her, but with no memory of our earlier encounter, the first time for me. Getting together in arose because I had tired of trying to meet women in bars, by chance in classes, or through similarly random selections, even though a good many encounters had provided considerable entertainment, and even brief satisfactions. It seemed time for a more scientific approach. Coming home to work during the second summer of college, I went through the high school graduation yearbook of my sister, who is two years younger. Initially, with my hang-ups showing, I looked for my own criteria of beauty. That selectivity cut roughly 370 possibilities down to just four. Then, having heard that prospective partners should have an IQ at least somewhat near one’s own, and by using membership in the National Honor Society as a likely criterion, those four were halved. One of the remaining two listed among her activities the literary magazine run by my favorite English teacher. Here is a snapshot, by my father, of her as Onondaga County’s Junior Miss, from a Fourth of July parade just after our formal meeting: Having optimized the possibilities, timorously I rang her up, being used to rejection by females from my high school. I did not know that she’d been infatuated with me ever since she had done my makeup for the General Bullmoose part in Li’ l Abner two years before. She did coyly reveal that her parents might allow me to go out with her, since her mother knew mine, through both of them being Girl Scout leaders, and was acquainted with my father by working as an executive secretary for a time in the research laboratory where he did. We still celebrate the anniversary of that first date, where we cruised in the VW to Skaneateles, and mostly sat on the steps of my favorite park at the lake’s edge, chatting. Later, in the Volvo, one of our latest arrivals back from our early dates followed taking in the Mormon Pagent in Palmyra, New York. That outing is amusing in retrospect, given our later residence in Utah and growing distaste for its dominant church. At the time it was, as much as anything else, a good excuse for staying out late together. A couple of other late-night returns in the Volvo came after trips to Saratoga, New York for concerts there, the first to hear Tom Paxton performing on a bill with Ian and Sylvia. The next year’s initial venture was to see Arlo Guthrie with Judy Collins, for which I’d even sprung for decent seats, instead of out in the grass, then a third back out there for Simon and Garfunkle. It being 1968, Arlo told a remarkable send-up tale about how concentration camps were being prepared for people who came to concerts like his, culminating with how the police had just come through the doors of the concert shell for us. That, of course, made everyone turn around, giving the poor rent-a-cops doing security at the heads of the aisles a moment of even greater discomfort than we were feeling. Great job! Collins, following, was spectacularly dressed in a long, low-cut red velvet dress. After some wonderfully new-to-us jazzy support for Bob Dylan’s “Tom Thumb Blues” and other familiar covers, she provided one of the absolute favorites among my concert moments, dropping her backups and their 42 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college complexity to play Leonard Cohen’s “Suzanne”, already a special song for me, on center stage alone with a 12-string guitar, gifting us her beautifully simple arrangement. After puttering around for the summer of 1967, I drove Snoopy back to college in Fort Collins, taking along a male high school friend who was heading the same way. We got as far as Goodland, Kansas, before my first significant foray into mechanics was required. There, I was able to work with locals to find out that the distributor points had broken, to replace them with ones that conveniently also fit some American-made car, and to set their gap adequately by using the thickness of a cardboard matchbook cover. When Thanksgiving approached, I got the bright idea of using my father’s gasoline credit card, which he’d given me for the end of summer college trip, to head out to visit Kathy, now at New College in Sarasota, Florida, stopping by to visit my relatives in Independence, Missouri, as travelling there was a known to be an okay cover possibility. That venture was only for the young. I didn’t even get out of town on the first day until it was nearly dark. The Volvo had only an eight-gallon gas tank, and even with its (for the period) remarkable 25+ mpg, I had my first moments of serious anxiety crossing northern New Mexico after midnight, where the distance between towns was very close to the car’s possible range. About the time I was considering knocking on a lighted ranch house door to try to buy some fuel, an open gas station hove most thankfully into view. I put in 7.8 gallons. A bit later, I was able to sleep for a couple of hours alongside a side road through a field on the Texas high plains. Cruising on, I was soon introduced to the glories of seemingly two-dimensional dawns, passing through their range of most exquisitely soft colors. A full day disappeared across that great (at least in width) state of Texas, with evening finding me entering among the longleafed pines, and at nightfall, arriving near the Louisiana border. The lights of petroleum refineries and other chemical industries inside that state appeared genuinely hellish, as they have whenever encountering them since. Having recently seen the movie In the Heat of the Night, one scene, with its racially charged car chase—remembered with thugs driving a white Chevrolet—flamed into mind later on as I cut across the Spanish-moss-dripping Louisiana bayou country along relatively back roads. Given my longish hair (for those "clean-cut" days), driving a strange looking car with its New York license plates, I was not best pleased by encountering a white Chevy full of yokels coming slowly the other way, observing them staring, and then, in the mirror, seeing their brake lights come on, with their car turning to follow me. I proceeded to bury the Volvo’s tape-strip, 100-mph speedometer and was ever so slowly be able to pull away from them, the Chevy falling a little further behind with each rise and fall in the terrain. That definitely woke me up again. I did make a seriously wrong turn after watching dawn come over New Orleans, finding myself nearly in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, before I discovered the error. I motored back on along the Gulf Coast, staying as near as I could to the water, until entering Florida on Sunday afternoon. The exhaust pipe on the Volvo broke soon thereafter, right where it exited its too-short cast-iron header, only inches from the engine. In Sweden, there is simply nowhere one can drive more than 24 hours at a stretch, but the too-thin metal that had been okay for their environment couldn’t take longer-distance American stress. In Tallahassee, with its remaining blue laws, I could find no one willing to fix the damage. When it happened again the next summer, I was ready, with an old metal juice can and some baling wire in the trunk, but not for that first encounter, being too tired at the time to think as creatively. 43 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college Then, the plot thickened further, from having assumed that once into Florida, I would be close to my destination, Sarasota. I slowly learned to be even more careful about map reading, through driving for nearly 500 more miles on the coldest day in years in the state, while needing to keep my head out the window, to avoid being killed by the fumes, and bypassing towns so as not get ticketed for the noise from the broken exhaust. Finally arriving, very late, after 50 hours of driving with, at most, 4 total hours of sleep, I simply passed out on Kathy’s bed, to the amusement of her roommate. We nevertheless had the expected wonderful time in that fascinating environment. New College was then actually very new indeed, with its I. M. Pei designed dorms and classrooms, situated next to the Ringling Brothers’ circus headquarters and museum, and having a former Ringling mansion as the college’s library. Students were limited to the top one percent nationally by testing scores. Mimi Witt, Kathy’s gorgeous and brilliant roommate, was the daughter of a top Palm Beach physician. She combined majors in chemistry and dance, writing and performing a thesis describing molecular structures through physical motion. A few years later, her analyses of my own motion, while visiting her in New York City, greatly helped me continue developing in a more confident direction. I headed back towards Colorado with one of their fellow students aboard, who was bound for his hometown in western Nebraska. Along the way, he taught me how to tune the SU carburetors by listening to the balance of their sounds with one’s head between them, thereby raising the trip mileage to nearly 30. On that return journey, I most remember Birmingham, Alabama glowing, from its steel mills reflected under lowering clouds. I called my folks from Independence, Missouri, where they had expected to hear from me, to warn them of the incoming gas credit card bills. I didn’t notice my mother dropping off from the extension phone as my father and I chatted on. That quiet event became quite funny a few weeks later. Meanwhile, we soldiered on in the Volvo, until I dropped my companion off in a particularly empty-seeming location, at a deserted intersection. An internal image of a young man, clad in the worn tatters popular with students of the era, leaving a warm car for a snowy roadside, with no other movement in view for dozens of miles, remains a particular vision of loneliness to me. The last couple of hundred miles of that trip were on the then further emptiness along Colorado Highway 14, running across the state’s eastern shortgrass plains. I tried to swerve around the first jackrabbit that ran in front of me, but it reversed course, followed by a set of thunks as its body bounced against the underside of the car. For the second rabbit, I just shrugged and held straight on, but, again, thunks. I was still thoroughly bummed out by the furry deaths at my hands when Fort Collins finally hove into view, but as I approached my residence, Noel Harrison’s version of “Suzanne” came onto the radio, the first time I’d heard the song, and it closed the adventure perfectly. With the trip, the love, and its safe end for me, hearing that song often still brings tears, of beauty and remembered joy, all as bittersweet as Cohen would properly have it. Three weeks later, I took a full load of fellow students back towards Syracuse for our Christmas break. When I arrived home dropping them off, my father, who was anything but athletic, came running out of the house, laughing, telling me that since my call, it had been the first extended period of quiet he’d had since being married. That was because my mother hadn’t spoken to him in the interim, because he wasn’t upset that I would visit a woman unsupervised, overnight. The irony was, although the pill was just coming into vogue, that particular woman was still keeping me at ultimate sexual bay. Marriage remained for the far future, though its temptations were very much there. 44 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college I soon did apply, and was accepted, for transfer to New College, but no scholarship was offered, so with my inherited intense dislike of debt, the immediate cost was going to be too high to finance. Meanwhile, Kathy’s Catholic, recent-immigrant (by my family’s standards), working class background—her father worked at the same factory as mine, but as an industrial blacksmith—was considered too different from mine, by my parents. For her folks, dating was okay, but her mother wanted was looking assuredly higher, wanting a doctor or similar as a match for her daughter, not a prospective poet or philosopher, the directions I was thinking of most then, being by no means ready to settle down to a traditional career. The young engineers I had worked with during summers at Solvay Process sealed that case, if nothing else managed to, for at age 24, they were effectively already dead. They would not only be no longer be growing physically, but ever so clearly, they were done mentally, too. Meanwhile, skipping through the snow and attending midnight high mass with Kathy in the downtown cathedral was quite a theatrical thrill, even if I had to repress laughter when the archbishop used the censer, paralleling closely how I had circled the car with incense in a very pagan-inspired ritual before leaving Fort Collins. On that trip back, the Volvo got its chance to shine, when the outside temperature near Chicago dropped to -24º F. It had a device like a window shade roller, which could selectively block air to the radiator, and was attached to a chain one could adjust from the driver’s seat. That arrangement required paying attention to the engine’s temperature gauge, but it worked wonderfully, so that my sister and I cruised on in shirt sleeves, smiling at all the folks in their supposedly superior gas hogs who were shivering behind frosted-up windows. We already had been laughing that evening, because, to get her to the college destination on time, we had left on New Year’s Eve, and crossed the time-zone line in Indiana at just the right moment to have two midnights, and we were speculating whether or not that made us an extra year older. In Iowa, I dropped off my sister at the church college that she was attending for a couple of years, which, quite amusingly, had been named Graceland long before Elvis made that name considerably more famous. There, finally remembering a suggestion about something to check, I started putting a few drops of oil or automatic transmission fluid more regularly into the dampers for the carbs. That turned out to be needed every 300 miles, another kind of brief attention-to-maintenance weirdness that foreign machinery required, but a detail made that it run ever so much better on less fuel than its competition. A few years later, when gasoline mileage temporarily became important in America, Ford came out with a “variable venturi” carburetor setup modelled on the ones in this Volvo, which was the same as so many British cars had sported since 1925 or so. I suspect Ford couldn’t figure out how to make them maintenance free, so with fuel injection becoming useful to meet mandated pollution-control requirements, they, like the old SU carburetors, rather quickly disappeared. While very efficient overall, they did leave some incompletely burned hydrocarbons behind under certain situations, especially if not carefully maintained, including regular readjustments, with occasional bearing replacements. The next intense memory from that trip was stopping to pick up another of my outbound passengers at Fort Leavenworth. Her father was a full colonel and the camp commandant, who invited me to join them for New Year’s dinner, with his huge family, austerely dressed, sitting around a long table in a surprisingly barren and chilly environment for such a high rank. In stark contrast to the rest, he was wearing a full dress uniform. I had not realized that still included not just a broad stripe on the outside of the pants, but also a very bright metal-sheathed sword, all overlain by an even more brilliant red-satin-lined cape. The Civil 45 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college War I had so intensely studied returned momentarily to life. Despite the car’s many adventures, not least exploring many back roads round about Fort Collins, that Volvo was not especially long lived. One night a lady acquaintance, an undertaker’s daughter, who apparently had an unrequited crush on me, and her 1958 Dodge blunderbuss were responsible for a horrifying sound at the place where I was temporarily living. When those of us remaining from a larger party looked out the door, we found that the hood of my car had filled the space where the porch had been. She had rammed it broadside. That was not its first dent, though, which came late one night, when I had flown back from Syracuse by student standby, after seeing my love during spring break. That flight became a complex trip of being bumped in places like Rochester and Buffalo, followed by stopping by my always highly religious cousins’ house in Denver, where I found these previously intense teetotalers suddenly mixing daiquiris. On the moonlit trip back up the freeway to Fort Collins afterwards, I followed my training from driver’s ed., along with the precepts of New York law, s by keeping to the right lane, even though traffic was light and I was the fastest vehicle, though never exceeding the posted speed limit. Near Erie, Colorado, a coal mine slag bank had been burning constantly, which I always looked forward to, as its glow was framed by the white-coated mountains behind. I glanced down the long downhill slope on the road, saw only a set of sports car taillights ahead, and then concentrated on the view of the fire. What happened next was neatly depicted in the movie Grand Prix (or was it Le Mans?), when the hero, driving a full-out racing car, with memories of causing the fiery death of another the previous year, and transfixed from seeing flames at the same corner, tries to come back to active awareness as he closes in fast, but is inadequately aware of a much slower car in his immediate path. For me, the practical hazard was a Fiat 850, heading back from a race, which was following a VW bus support vehicle that was chugging up the next rise of the routinely varying grade, at what I later found out to be 25 mph. As in the movie, I almost got by in time, but not quite, in my case clipping his left rear fender, imparting enough momentum to send him spinning into the bridge abutment at the bottom of the slope. That contact bent my own tougher fender just enough so that it gripped the right front tire, thereby negating my ability to steer, and making me head uncontrollably toward the farther side of the abutment at nearly 65 mph. I locked up the brakes, slowing me enough to leave only a thin strip of paint on the bridge’s concrete, which was still visible years later. I thought I’d killed the other driver, because the Fiat was so thoroughly compressed from its impacts at both ends. Instead, like many other well-designed lightweight cars, it had sacrificed itself, absorbing the collision energy by folding up sequentially, while protecting the passengers’ space. As a racer wearing good seatbelts, the Fiat’s driver wound up unhurt, though quite unhappy. I got a ticket for careless driving; he got one for driving too slowly on an interstate without using flashers. At the moment I write this line, it is more than 40 years since that last, even partially-atfault, on-road “accident” involving someone else. I never again drove in the slow lane unless I was indeed slower than other traffic. Instead, I have religiously watched my mirrors, moving over if someone coming up even faster wants to go by. That rather serious tangle taught me absolutely how neither everything taught in driver’s ed., nor what is required by law, will be appropriate for all drivers, or in all situations. While having to learn this the hard way, I was indeed thankful that this conclusion was reached without damage to anyone’s health, because both cars were rationally designed, not deadly heavyweights. It was a vital step towards realizing how assumptions of equality may apply appropriately to humans at their 46 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college birth, along with their treatment before the law, but not to them for all subsequent physical interactions, and not ever to machines. My Volvo did a lot of damage to some metal, but, if I’d been driving anything much heavier, I would surely have taken a life that night. However, between some seemingly minor design flaws built into Snoopy and how I was not yet doing much of the maintenance or repair work, that particular Volvo wasn’t very economical overall, even if it was notably safer and more fuel-efficient than anything made in America. At one point I figured I could have driven a new Cadillac for the same per mile cost, although I had too much respect for many related issues to do so. Besides the problem with the exhaust, the coolant passages on the Volvo B16 engine weren’t engineered correctly for extended operation, making that design tend to burn one side of its number two piston. Mine was among those that did, a fact almost certainly known to those who sold it to me, but who had not shared it with me. That damage was not cheap to fix. Further, the electrical system was six volt, with an inadequate generator that quit all too regularly, making learning to change its brushes one of my earliest forays into mechanics. One failure had me crossing Wyoming in a heavy rain, having to choose between headlights and windshield wipers, operating the latter by hand, and still stopping regularly to get a battery charge at gas stations. Another time, coming in to Syracuse on the last leg of on a 2,000 mile trip, I timed its decline so that the stored charge faded beyond the point of running the engine just as I turned into our home street, and coasted the last few feet into the driveway. There were several Volvo 544s in Fort Collins at the time. We could recognize one another at night, because our headlights would dip each time we shifted gears. It took about 100 miles of driving to recharge the battery from each start in cold weather, so for driving around town one of the winters, I would trade off nights on a plug-in charger with another roomer, who had an MGA, in the former frat house where we were living. That car was particularly amusing because George had cut a space in the grill so that he could alternatively start its engine from the outside with a removable hand crank. After Snoopy the Volvo got crunched by the big Dodge, its damage led to a moment of literally flying in it. The car could be driven, but its bent front suspension meant that if one took one’s hands off the steering wheel, that would immediately spin to the far right. Living for a while up a canyon above Fort Collins, and coming in one morning after a sleepless, druggy night watching the stars, I had my skis inside, extending over the passenger seat. At the first corner, they slid over and clunked me on the side of my head. Groggily, with no traffic in sight, and having passed the apex of the curve, I instinctively reached over to push them away. When I turned my attention back to the road, the car had turned itself off of the pavement and was now airborne, about 10 feet above the paralleling stream. It was quite fun until we landed, thankfully gently enough, but well out of reach of getting back out without help. My friend George Post was the first to happen by, asking from his MG what I was doing down there. Along with the tow truck that followed, a call came for the Highway Patrol. I was eventually sentenced once again for "careless driving", thereby being required to take a remedial course. The long-term license-test instructor noted afterwards that I knew at least as much about how to handle vehicles as anyone he’d examined before. My father by then had enough of contributing to the Volvo’s upkeep, so he suggested that I fly home at the end of the school year, take his 40 horsepower VW back in the fall, and he’d get something newer for himself. That exchange got amusing as I returned through Western Nebraska on old U.S. Highway 30, since the limited access replacement, I-80, was yet incomplete. In theory and in practice, the Beetle’s top speed was just over 70 mph, that road’s speed limit. One semi-truck was cruising at about 65, so when I could see a mile or so of clear road in the other lane, I’d pull out to pass, getting a good slingshot effect from his 47 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college draft, but I could not get through the truck’s bow wave, and would have to fall back behind. He’d get to laughing, making push motions, but he would not lift off his throttle to let me by. Later, when I’d take the VW skiing, a routine for the uphill portion of Loveland Pass became shaking my fist at the 35 mph curve signs, because 30 was its maximum speed in second gear, and that gear was required for enough power to ascend the steep slope. Once I pushed faster through the first curve, trying to preserve momentum to use a higher gear, but the try got the car got well up on 2 wheels, like the stunt drivers do. It was not something I wished to repeat. At the time, I was concerned about breaking my skis if the car rolled, which must have given me the right image to get it back down. VWs were great for teaching one how to drive in snow, when their low power and engine location in the rear actually added substantial advantages. One could move the wheel just ever so slightly at routine corners, and then power skid around them. My mother hated that when I did it with her along. I got so that cornering in town could be done as fast as the speed limit allowed, in snow or on dry pavement, which was a lot faster than most far more expensive cars could manage. Forty horsepower also taught me how to calculate passing distances, since there was no useful reserve acceleration. It took a lot of space to get by another vehicle, even when getting a running start by dropping a ways behind, braking to bail out at the last instant before pulling out if necessary. The Beetle being generally less fun to drive than the Volvo also encouraged me to concentrate more on study and socialization, rediscovering their virtues at times I might otherwise have been playing on the road. A musingly, as I was considering where to go next with this memoir, “California Dreamin’” by the Mommas and Poppas came onto the background radio. That happened to be the very first song I heard when I arrived at the CSU campus, emanating from speakers set on seemingly inaccessible projections on the dorm I would be living in, and so different from any sounds I had heard before. It provided a premonition for what often seemed to be a real change for our generation, despite its sadly turning from such intricately imagined, all-encompassing promise into destructive side alleys like hard drugs, Charles Manson, and George W. Bush. The better music of the 1960s does remain as some proof that there was a reason for hope. Listening to the harmonies of Ian and Sylvia or Richard and Mimi Fariña, among others recently, and at this moment to the extended version of "Crimson and Clover" underlines how, with its amazing depth of creativity, nothing like this music existed before or since, along with so many other irreplacables. Listening to that music was assisted by a focussing filter, at least similar to those applied during much of its creation. I was turned on to marijuana by a couple of elementary school teachers in suburban Boulder, in the early spring of 1967, as preparation for a local "Aquarian festival" to celebrate another anticipated coming of a truly new age. LSD followed very soon thereafter, being still legal in Colorado at the time, and therefore pure and open to the religious care suggested by Aldous Huxley in Island. The experience was both intensely memorable and genuinely magic within that care-filled context. Watching a drop of water from an icicle catch the new sun at dawn and explode into colors beyond those previously imaginable remains an unmatchable moment, especially framed as it was by music created under the same new influence, not least the best of the Rolling Stones, the Beatles, the Grateful Dead, and so many others. For me, it was not just the new that become even more special. When my roommate started to get unpleasantly disoriented, I put on Leonard Bernstein’s rendition of Aaron Copeland’s “Appalachian Spring”, and the flow with it likely will remain as close to heaven as I may ever get. I had always listened to music more intensely than most, but this added several more dimensions, most still recallable, 48 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college and augmenting ongoing daily life. One may be able to get to the same place without the clues that acid and pot gave, but I still believe that my daily attentiveness to fine detail in the world, like the hawk following the cloud patterns at this moment, was honed to a higher degree than most ever experience with the ongoing help from memories of possibilities they provided for seeing and hearing. Alas, the persecutors of pleasure and genuine (not material) progress, along with errors by some its proponents, soon led to LSD being associated with a variety of negative baggage. Bad trips, from many sources, followed. This powerful chemical never was safe or appropriate to use casually, since it greatly amplifies any incoming presuppositions, along with disturbances during its presence. Mixing it with other compounds could, and soon did, become rapidly deadly. For these, controversies that whirl around drugs, like wars, make either humor or sanity harder to reach. Assumptions that all drugs needed to be treated equally were part of the problem then, as they have remained. The vastly more addictive cocaine, heroin, and amphetamines, inherently so much more destructive when misused, were lumped legally, and by the media with LSD and marijuana, to absolutely everyone’s detriment. Lysergic acid was something, at least for me, to be used a few times and then left alone, having learned all it had to say, not least that it had to be chemically pure and used with extreme care in an at least close-toreligious setting. It was not, and is not, for simple entertainment, with its illegality and bad press contributing considerably to dangers from its practical use. The differentially more powerful drugs never held much allure for me, except when the appropriate portions were needed for serious pain, and then for as short as possible a period. Their limits were confirmed as some were tried once or twice out of curiosity, to see if lies about them were not covering some useful potential. Over the years, I have continued to watch too many people hurt themselves—and others—through the inappropriate use of methamphetamine, cocaine, and opiates, along with the profitably legal, but as least as addictive, dangerous, and destructive phony happiness pills like Prosac, as well as tobacco. The drug use situation is more complex than willfully ignorant legislators, or most of the public behind them, can effectively understand. Inherently less dangerous marijuana was eventually set aside in my life, because of persecution of its users by the ignorant, aided by those who profit from more dangerous substances, selectively pushing them through association of any "recreational" drugs with illegality. The combination made pot unsafe, not for reasons of health or addiction, but because of the threat of literally being put in a cage for using it. My arthritis and creativity would very much appreciate its occasional return. Those in serious pain, or in need of surgery, dental or otherwise, would also appreciate a more rational availability of opiates and cocaine, under a physician’s watch. As with alcohol, balance is so bloody difficult to achieve, legally and for all too many people, by their own inappropriate choices of how much and when to use the products. As a college freshman, I had found out what alcohol can do. At the cast party for Molière’s The Miser, wherein I had played the servant, Master Jacques, to considerable satisfaction all around, I mixed too much bourbon and warm sake. It was three days before I felt human again. I did get sick once again, but from a simple volume effect in a typically boyish beer-chugging affair not too long afterwards. Those were sufficiently salutary lessons to never need to be repeated. Marijuana was a lot easier to deal with, except for being illegal, and only tied thereby so inappropriately to much more dangerous drugs and actions. Selective persecution observed personally led to appreciating how government was not 49 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college always the clean and just organization that I had been brought up to believe it was. In that semi-rural house where Snoopy the Volvo was to so damaged, I shared living quarters for a couple of months with a changing variety of fringe characters. One was the brother of a fellow who’d fled town on advance word that a warrant had been issued in response to his selling LSD. A group of residents and friends were quietly sitting around early one evening when I saw an unmarked white car drive up, then thought I saw someone run by a window, but shrugged it off. The doorbell rang, and an older stranger appeared when I responded. I assumed it was the landlord, whom I’d not met, coming by to collect the rent. This fellow, dressed as a civilian, instead threw me aside, drew a gun, and barged in, followed by several others, also most visibly armed, telling us to stand against the wall. No warrant was shown, nor were badges displayed. It was November, but the door was left open, and we were told to remove our shoes and sweaters. The two prospective victims who did possess a bit of pot at that moment were in the kitchen. Dick responded to a photo-based recognition question of “Are you Passman?” with a “Yes”, even though it was a shared last name with a brother. The intruders made no effort to find out if they had exactly the right person, and the two who had entered the kitchen began frisking him against the wall. Meanwhile, Fred, unnoticed on the floor by their feet, having put the resource baggie in his pocket, slowly crawled towards the adjacent back door. Seeing his moment and catching Dick’s eye—who was very strongly athletic and responded by swinging his arms, catching both friskers in the throat—Fred ran for it. Not far from the door was a deep irrigation ditch, hidden by shrubbery. One of the un-uniformed, but assumed cops started chasing Fred, while another stood on the porch with a small revolver, holding it shakily in the air, and asking, in a Barney Fife voice, “Sh-shall I shoot?” Fred entered the bushes, leapt for the canal, and his follower, not knowing the water was beyond, ran off the edge, with legs pumping just like in the cartoons. Fred released the baggie underwater, successfully letting it drift away unseen. An agonizingly long time later, after the invading crew had thoroughly torn the contents of the place apart and widely scattered all of our possessions, the culmination of the exercise was the break-in’s leader, with only huge, 11x14” manila envelopes for evidence, holding a single small roach with tweezers, preparing to drop it in, crying, with the voice of perverted justice, “Well, we didn’t get you guys this time, but we’ll get you yet!” Given that many visitors had smoked hand-rolled tobacco, and marijuana wasn’t something to waste, what he carried off was most likely completely legal. No warrant was ever shown, nor did the invaders ever identify themselves, and they had no legitimate reason to bother anyone present. Their apparent target had been gone for more than a month, and successfully escaped, eventually to become a prominent, widely respected, wholly legitimate businessman. Still more generally understandably, perhaps, was (and is) my all to justified worry about cops getting into the wrong room or concentrating on the wrong person. Stories become much more intense when one actually has been the target of attention of a bunch of very nervous men with guns, especially when they were barging into one’s home, without uniforms and without the least proof of why they had the right to be there. More initially benign circumstances with similar breaches of legal propriety have happened to me twice since. Once happened when just walking with a student friend, who had been, unknown to us, mistaken by someone for a multiple murderer known to be on the loose in the general area. Quite large number of armed cops suddenly appeared, surrounding us, with a whole lot of black holes (of their guns) waveringly or steadily pointed in our direction. Once IDs were provided, we could breathe again, understanding their logic, but not without adding another 50 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college level of appreciation for how less familiar parts of society to suburban life might feel. The other incident came still later, when I was alone, out walking with my 11 pound Yorkshire Terrier in a light rain late one night, and was mistaken for a recent, brutal rapist on the loose. We were suddenly confronted by two newly minted sheriff’s deputies leaping out of their car, with literally shaking fingers on their triggers. That time, I had just returned from years away from the town, had no ID with me, and had spent the evening sitting by myself listening to music, so there was no corroboration possible for how I’d spent the critical hours. I was not even sure who I might call locally for support. Stories by Kafka and others of prisoners lost in the system felt all too close, letting go only when I asked the young officers how many men, having just carried off a violent crime, would be found out walking a small dog in the rain? However, despite such close skirting of the possibilities, my situation thankfully never became as bad as that for the million or so that have been jailed for drugs that the pharmaceutical establishment doesn’t make enough money from, or otherwise feels threatened by. The worst case in my direct knowledge occurred for one of the gentlest, nicest, most concerned for others that I’ve ever met. He ran a coffeehouse in Denver, with the assistance of a church, and wrote poetry, providing an especially pleasant environment for urban social interchange, a physically and otherwise lovely place where I spent a considerable amount of thoroughly enjoyable time. Because he provided a few others some pot and LSD, the latter just at the time it was being made illegal, all by mutual consent but not sufficiently secretly, he was busted. As a gentle sort, he well knew that prison would involve brutal conditions, not least of all almost certain rape for him. In the courtroom, after his ten year sentence was read out, he pulled out a concealed pistol, and blew his brains out in front of the judge. More happily, hearing a Creedence Clearwater song on the radio has brought back another visionary trip during the same period. It related to how I had, at times, been discontented during my freshman year, and so had dropped by the campus counseling center. The reception folks looked at one another, smiled in clear agreement, and said, “Jackie”. She, a long-term graduate student from California, soon suggested that I try transferring to her alma mater, Reed College. I was admitted, but would have had to pay vastly more money, and live off campus as a new student, thus making integration to a small group even more difficult. I didn’t take up that alternative, but the next year, after encountering her at a campus showing of the Beatles’ Help, started spending time at Jackie’s house. There, a semi-communal group lived on five acres of recovering farmland, but still within town boundaries, with the sprawling, well shaded facilities making it a comfortable stopping point for passers through. That led to a number of life-long friendships with continually interesting people: artists, poets, writers, actors, and other creative types. One February day, I rode with a group from the farm up to a place called Duck Lake, high in the mountains above Boulder, to a cabin owned by a lady described as a New York City socialite. Everyone dropped some very high quality acid, and we most memorably roasted chickens on a huge open fire built on the thick ice in the middle of the lake. Returning to town, our group stopped by the house of one of the owners of the best local bookstore, known then as the 'Brillig Works'. There, on an unusually fine stereo system, I heard Creedence for the first time. What makes that memory so multi-dimensional, beyond how wonderful that music was in that situation, is how the same house is now owned by a close friend from graduate school, ever so differently decorated, but still structurally recognizable. During regular visits there, at odd times one the thinner places between my brain compartments emerges, as present and old visions fade into one another. 51 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college It is an ongoing theory of mine that memories are linked not just chronologically, but also by place, state of mind, and smell, among other categorizations. Drugs (including alcohol) and pain are among those states where, when under the same general influences, I’ve found that one can reach situation-related past interactions much more easily. M eanwhile during this period, my mother was already beginning to slide into the decline that may have been initiated by one of the not yet fully tales from the pharmaceutical industry’s misuse of humans. A hot news issue during the early years of the second millennium has been abuse of steroids in sports. Overlooked within that is how, back in the 1950s massive doses of cortisone, a particularly powerful steroid, were being prescribed for arthritis. My mother had a particularly severe case of the rheumatoid variety, with all the associated pain. At the time of her death, her hands were twisted into near uselessness by the disease, so one could readily understand why she would pursue any treatment recommended by a doctor. The treatment with cortisone, for which there had been no long-term testing (nor were there ethical ways of doing so readily available, then or now), did provide a substantial palliative. Unfortunately, quietly posted data in the medical literature suggests that it could have been an active part of what basically melted her mind, shrinking her brain, and producing symptoms matching Alzheimer’s, but manifested far sooner. At the very least, no physician now would even think of prescribing the doses that she was given. The time was far less lawsuit-happy than the present, the results were slow to develop, and those who made the prescriptions and the sales behind them could not have known those particular consequences. The users did obtain significant relief, at least until more obvious and immediate symptoms of trouble started appearing, ones that were the reasons behind original pulling of the drug from routine heavy use. On the other hand, treatments like those blended into other things overlooked, thought to be safe, later affecting my father and me. They all should serve as a more of a caution than is routinely given to "advances" of science. The greater the supposed benefit, the greater the doubt that should accompany it, all the way up to the oncoming disasters, not yet revealed in their fullness, from nuclear power and biotechnology in their forefront. The first associated joker awaiting at the personal level, after the lead assimilated while removing old paint (with a hot iron device) from our house and Syracuse’s serious air pollution issues from its many heavy industries, was the mercury I encountered during my college summer jobs. That liquid metal wasn’t considered to be a fully serious safety threat at the time. The Solvay Process chlorine/caustic building was about the size of a football field, with three-foot-wide metal boxes running the structure’s entire width, held on girders one story up above a mostly bare, slightly sloping concrete floor. Each of these “cells” contained somewhere near 3 tons of elemental mercury, over which ran brine, while 50,000 amps of electricity (at a small fraction of a volt) coursed through the mercury, which acted as an electrolytic cathode. The results of the interaction were a very pure form of sodium hydroxide (a very much stronger version of household oven cleaner, also called caustic soda), hydrogen, and chlorine gas. The latter two had to be carefully kept apart; when they got together at one of the company’s other plants one night, the whole place basically vanished very suddenly. The hydrogen gas was piped to another building, to be distilled in a fascinating complex of clear glass piping with water into a highly concentrated peroxide form. Some of this was literally to be used as rocket fuel, manufactured through another spectacularly dangerous process, one responsible for more than a few deaths and associated destruction. The magnetic fields around the cells were incredible, while I once measured the air 52 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college temperature in the building to be 130° F (50° C). Ferric metal, the cheapest option for construction, in that awesomely corrosive environment tended to soften with rust and then break apart, so that all the mercury from a cell would regularly crash down to the open floor below, where it would form shining pools maybe 30 feet (10 m) in diameter and a couple of centimeters (an inch) deep. Part of my job as a day laborer that second summer of college was to use an ordinary water hose, whenever one of those breaks happened, to wash these toxic pools into channels cut into the floor, where wooden boxes were supposed to separate the mercury from the washing water, which then ran off into a neighboring creek. Anyone who knows chemistry can imagine the amount of mercury that sublimated into the air with a place that hot, and then into the workers, including me, where it was absorbed into our bones, to keep on poisoning us slowly throughout our lives. At the end of many work days, my 10-Karat gold high school ring would have amalgamated to a silvery hue from mercury collected from the air onto its surface. One of mercury’s earliest uses has been to separate gold from ores, because of that selective absorption, a process which continues even today in places where laws are lax. The regular employees in that plant has their urine tested weekly, and they would be furloughed when the amount of mercury in it rose above a certain level. This was done not out of charity, but because that threshold amount correlated with getting too crazy to function properly, even at the low level that they were expected to. Mercury, after all, is what made the mad hatter(s) so noticeably mad, back when it was used as sizing for felt and hatters did their work by hand, absorbing it through their fingers and lungs. I have to shake my head when I see all the worry now over the amount of the pure element in things like thermometers. Of course I, like so many others, have big mercury amalgam fillings in my teeth, too, from the same period of “What, me worry?” about chemical toxicities. For counterpoint, the contemporary extreme paranoia about a spilled few drops of mercury, or even the presence of a contained ounce, should put workers’ regular exposure to literally tons of it into perspective. That Solvay plant was “losing” 160 pounds of mercury a day overall, which pissed me off at the time, not because it was an environmental or a health threat (since neither factor was known in sufficient detail at the time), but simply because the stuff cost $500 for an 80 pound “flask”. That which meant that the company were wasting the equivalent of my whole summer salary every four days, just through their careless dispersals. With that, and the other stupidities I saw, it amazed me how the chemical industry ever made any money. There were, nevertheless, minor compensations. Carrying one of those full flasks of liquid metal, whose containers were steel cylinders just about the size of a 2 liter bottle of soda, yet weighing a total of 90 pounds (40 kg), along the huge electrical input bars that ran open alongside the walkway, could be quite entertaining. The mercury would slosh weirdly inside, while the iron canister would be drawn intensely, but irregularly as one moved, towards the open air conductor bars with their tremendous electrical current flows. I weighed all of 125 pounds at the time, so balance became not a trivial issue when refilling a cell. The effect certainly added to my appreciation of the practical usefulness of basic physics. One could easily suspend very large hammers in mid air over the anodes, too, and we did that for entertainment sometimes. Although the amperage was huge, and the environment damp, the open busses weren’t instantly deadly, because the voltage was so low. One could actually touch them; they just felt warm and strange. Doing so, though, wasn’t good for watches (and probably not for nerves or other body cells, either). The Minimata stories about the catastrophic poisoning of children in Japan by an industrial plant very similar to the one I worked in started coming out a few years later. W. 53 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college Eugene Smith’s memorable photographs caught some public attention (especially after his own brutal beating by company thugs), eventually leading to that part of the Solvay plant becoming one of the original Superfund sites. No compensation, as far as I know, has ever been even proposed for any of us who worked there, or in the similar plants, some of which continue operating outside of the United States. My time at the Solvay Process Company was only the first of the experiences that have led me to be so doubtful of government or industry protestations about how safe things are, and so critical of them. I won’t bore readers with my own symptoms, which differ from those who encountered it as children, but I am very regularly reminded of this poison in my body, as are those who are around me when the too commonly intense anger or the thankfully occasional emotional meltdowns it enhances surface most obviously. The automatic flipping up of the company-issued gas mask in response to the smell of chlorine during those summers retains a residual response, too. Learning to do it was a very immediate matter of life and death, at too many times quite literally. Almost all pesticides and herbicides are based on adding chlorine to hydrocarbons. Through the inherently incomplete nature of organic chemical reactions, measurable quantities are left unreacted in their mixtures, while the completed portions break down over time to free more chlorine gas. I still react instinctively to very small quantities of chlorine, and for intentionally toxic compounds that resulting internal warning remains correct. All the closely associated poisons being used on silly places like lawns, or in massive quantities on our food crops, may not be as immediately deadly as the undiluted gas, but cumulatively they are very surely anything but harmless to humans, while even more harmful to other species, and cumulatively at least as harmful to our planet as a functional system. It takes weeks for any pesticide or herbicide application to become invisible to my nose, while stores that sell those common poisons are intolerable places to me—as they should become to all humans. For my father, a closely related, and very serious, booby prize from industrial ignorance would be revealed in 1969 in the form of testicular cancer, a disease rare in men over 30. In retrospect, this was hardly a surprise, given that the longest focus of his employment was X-ray crystallography, using that radiation-driven tool with protections that were then thought sufficient, but far less thorough than what is now required. Once again, the powers that be, and their operational scientists, thought that they had learned enough about the dangers, but they clearly had not. Ironically, besides the obvious surgery, part of his treatment was to receive even more intense radiation. Although that helped tame the cancer, its inadequately focussed exposure severely damaged his pancreas, condemning him to a form of diabetes, requiring insulin injections several times daily, and contributing further to his fairly early death. I asked him once if he wished to sue the company, and he said, no, that they had given him a good life, and provided the care necessary to keep him from dying (for a few years). Along with my own experience with mercury, his condition compromised my rosy childhood view of science and medicine as all knowing, or as ever likely to be near that. Humans make errors, not least in understanding complex situations, where consequences may be hidden, especially by time. It remains difficult for me to find humor in these instances. Cheery proclamations by genetic and nuclear engineers, along with economists, all predictably fall afoul of my realistically proven doubts, but unfortunately the public continues to be hoodwinked by the rich corporate lawyers, including the ones in Congress, who hide such truths. On the other side, rethinking about working for Solvay Process has made me appreciate that it wasn’t the other student workers who were memorable, it was the guys we called the 54 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college “winter help” (since the company called us summer help), the ones who ran the factory year round. These made up a fascinating bunch of characters, doing classic blue-collar work for union wages that were anything but munificent, in about as dangerous a set of conditions as one would (preferably not) like to imagine. Most were far more intelligent than the clichés would have them be. One of the most basic laborers had been a major player in the building of the St. Lawrence Seaway, but his business had gone seriously bankrupt for a variety of very human reasons, so he had said to hell with that kind of responsibility. He was just one among many whose stories were fascinating, so I shut up and listened to them. Another had been a semi-pro hockey player after his stint in the Army during the second World War. His Solvay assignment was refurbishing valves on the chlorine railway tank cars, which was required after each of their trips. Running a most efficient operation, which allowed some time for relaxation in that work group’s isolated shed, his favorite story was about providing a disguised company "efficiency expert" with coffee upon a visit, thus permanently losing one position on their team. Harmon turned out later to be a close relative of my eventual wife, so another bit of fun came from knowing her family from a different angle. During my second college summer, this time as a day laborer, we students did some work that the union folks quite rightfully refused to perform. Cleaning the chlorine "cooling towers" became the championship experience during that time. Very hot gas from the generating cells was cooled and cleaned with concentrated sulfuric acid as it passed through two-story tall, roughly four foot diameter metal tubes. These were filled with perforated ceramic disks, each about three inches in diameter and an inch thick, whose detailed appearance I remember all too well. Through their years in operation, these disks had gotten covered and plugged with sticky black gook, making the gas no longer flow easily, and reducing their cleaning efficiency. Plant engineers got the bright idea for us to dig out the old disks and replace them. This meant that, clad in complete rubber suits—the tower walls being covered with sticky acid goo, too—while wearing gas mask and goggles, we had to climb down a ladder and then, with a short handled shovel, break the gummed up disks apart and dump them into a bucket tied to a rope, which would be pulled up by the guys outside. I measured the temperature once as 130º F inside the column. My goggles would fill up to eye level with sweat in roughly thirty seconds, requiring me to quickly lift them to let it out. The longest any of us managed to stay inside a tower was three minutes. At lunch, the regulars would keep a notable distance away from us, between the smell of our sweat and the coating on our clothes of foully-chlorinated, spectacularly impure goo that managed to get past our outer defenses. Only now has it occurred to me that some of my medically noticed lung scarring may have originated with this task, since the masks we wore were intended only for emergency escape, not extended use, and they surely were not designed to deal with some of the more complex compounds we were dealing with, either. Some of the other tasks from this summer job were actually quite satisfying, however, particularly the rhythmical two person swinging of the heavy filter frames when working with one of the regulars to change the ‘Solka Floc’ used in one stage of the peroxide distillation process. The same stuff provided part of the change away from the wimp that had been me, since by the end of the summer I could pull and jerk a 55 gallon cardboard drum of the stuff, which weighed more than I did, from the ground into overhead bins. Nevertheless, despite all the positive fascinations, I was more than glad for the summers to be over, and to return to being a college student. Adding to my wonder at how people 55 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college would be willing to do that kind of work for a lifetime was curiosity about how the company could make any money with all the colossally expensive mistakes I saw being made by workers. The most awesome blunder during my summers was the dumping of fully 10,000 gallons of the costly, ready to ship, electrolytic-grade caustic into the neighboring lake by opening a wrong valve one night. Other significant ones were made by management, not least by their refusal to put in a decent control system for the mercury, thereby losing $1,000 worth of that liquid metal each week. That immediate cost (in dollars worth much more then) did not include dealing with larger eventual human and ecosystem impacts from the 180 pounds being dispersed weekly, when now a hazardous materials squad will be called out if an ounce is spilled anywhere. Above that were the many hundreds of cubic feet of Freon, a gas eventually to be discovered as ozone destroying, that were released before the bosses believed me that joints in a new chlorine compressor had been put together wrongly, without proper seals. Chlorine leaks regularly got large enough to shut down a nearby restaurant, with local scuttlebutt being that the owner made enough from the legal settlements for that lost time to balance otherwise hopeless books. The list went on from there. A s a junior back on the education front, medicine as a serious goal evaporated just as completely, when I took embryology, suddenly amidst a group of intensely serious types. The instructor believed that no matter how good a group might be, their grades must fall neatly onto a traditional curve. To separate the lot sufficiently for his tastes, first came questions about the lectures, then about assigned reading, the optional reading, and finally research results that could only be discovered by students working independently. The subject itself was, and remains, interesting stuff, but there must be a balance of inputs to my life. Getting outdoors, viewing or creating art, and listening to music were all too important to set aside, so I did not manage to elicit an A from that particular competition. While still a freshman, the same fellow on my dorm floor who had the Volvo 544 was also a serious folk music aficionado, with an Ampex tape recorder in the days when such things were for pros only. I’d heard Pete Seeger perform live the year before as a great first-hand introduction to serious folk, during a time when he was still being picketed as a “Communist”. I had begun listening then to recordings of Bob Dylan and a few others who had some visibility beyond the already familiar Kingston Trio or Peter, Paul, and Mary. Doug Raden turned me on to a host of then more obscure performers that I still love, from a more-or-less local, yet widely unknown Judy Collins to Ian and Sylvia, with hints of so many more, not least among them Dave van Ronk. These introductions came both from playing the tapes Doug made at the campus radio station, and from snippets overheard through the group of acoustic pickers who hung out and played in his room. Doug flunked out at the end of the year, and disappeared from my life, until I recently tracked him down through the Internet, made contact, and was told fascinating tales of trying education again, through junior college and the University of Missouri, and of his going on for a life amidst the higher technical levels of the audio and film industries. One fall 1965 evening sucked me in even more to the folk genre, when all eight who had turned up sat in a circle, at his invitation, on the floor of a huge ballroom while Phil Ochs went ahead and played us a full-length acoustic concert. Three years later, I saw him again, performing his quiet favorites and louder anti-war mantras in Boulder, but this time complete with CBS cameras and their lights overlooking a packed auditorium, with 3,000 plus enthusiasts attending the live concert, being broadcast to a nationwide following. CSU then had a superb arts program, among so much more, projecting in 35 mm complete sets of Bergman and Fellini films in the creation sequence. Regularly appearing 56 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college were travelling groups like the Living Theater and The Committee, along with films from independent artists. In permanent residence were two of the finest poster artists in the world. By just passing through the center of the campus, I got to spend parts of afternoons wandering with Helen Reddy at her time of peak popularity for “I Am Woman”, and talking at length with Tom Rush when his hit covers of Joni Mitchell compositions were just ready for release. This happened by noticing these singers in the halls of the student union, when others did not, and by thereupon applying sufficient friendly chutzpah. The organizer for those concerts, the various outstanding art displayed around the campus buildings, and the film series later went on to run all programming for the Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C. All this exposure to the various arts, and their increasingly anti-war content, blended with introductions to serious philosophy and non-mainstream history through varied classes. One especially provocative course was called Literature of Social Protest, which began with Jack Kerouac’s On the Road, continued with classics by John Steinbeck and Upton Sinclair, and for me culminated with Sinclair Lewis’ sadly under-appreciated It Can’t Happen Here, an effective outline of the potential for a rise of internal American despotism. These readings dovetailed with a series of oriental history courses from the eventual dean of the College of Liberal Arts, Loren Crabtree, who became a friend as well as a professor. This background most especially at the time led me into deeply reading works by Ghandhi and other pacifist philosophers. Meanwhile, the college poetry program allowed small evening gatherings with luminaries such as Allen Ginsberg, Gary Snyder, and Norman Mailer. The program leader, Nick Crome, willingly offered his beautifully hand-built house well up Rist Canyon as a party center for these visitors and their local peers, with a few of us students as happy hangers on. Nick had been impressed enough with my work to offer me a modest scholarship, which encouraged publishing a few pieces in the campus literary weekly, and to try for more from time to time. I didn’t pursue the offered connections as far as I probably should have, especially the class led by Galway Kinnell while he was in residence one quarter, although he did intriguingly, and with a targeted smile, inscribe his What a Kingdom It Was for me: “in the night, to live”. Very few have had a better autographed book collection than Crome, but one morning the campus newspaper led with a photograph that has always helped me keep my own materialism in check. In it, Nick was picking through the ashes of his treasures, from a fire starting in his poet’s self-wrought wiring job, and then spreading too fast for control in his home’s too distant location. The tale later reached me that soon thereafter he wound up joining a Zen monastery in Hokkaido. Philip Whalen wrote, in a poem that was written for Alan Ginsberg: “So you’re a poet, hey? Well if you’re a poet Tell me a poem. Come on, tell me one. Are you a published poet? Do you know Nick Crome?” It was all a great privilege. F or all the varied failures, and aside from other controversies, our generation did manage some very notable creativity, and we played a leading role in eventually 57 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college stopping one major war, even if we sadly failed afterwards to root out its cause, which was an excessively large professional army. As long as such armies are allowed to exist, they generally find an outlet wherein to use their tools, a contention playing out once again through destructive involvement in conflicts in far away Iraq and Afghanistan, as of this writing. I did manage to make a somewhat visible contribution at times during the slow and painful rolling back of the hubristic morass in Vietnam, by helping to organize, and marching in the front row of, the largest protest held between Chicago and San Francisco, and then assisting in nailing 95 reasons why ROTC no longer deserved to be on campus onto the door of their building. Some of the best publicity from our ongoing guerrilla theater came from the 1969 ROTC commissioning ceremony, which was held in the old football stadium. The field was surrounded by wooden bleachers, so several of us dressed up in Army garb, to noisily march up and down behind the reviewing stand where the military brass had arrayed themselves. As we did, several of the ladies in our activist group, who had done themselves up in imaginative avenging angel outfits, swooped in and around us, making loud airplane noises, as we had done. They closed in and plastered us with baggies they had filled with ketchup, whereupon we flopped about and eventually played dead, while they carried out appropriate looking ceremonies, singing dirges behind us. As well as being the unnamed center of focus by the crowd in the image above, these got me into several better pictures on the front and other pages of the Denver Post. Their sum led to the pleasure of meeting Joan Baez and David Harris on a close up basis, finding that temporary couple to be not just superb leaders, but gracious individuals. Not unexpectedly, David, as a voluble draft card burner, appears to have had difficulty in recovering from the brutal pressure of particularly corrupt portions of the Federal government, after it focused on breaking him within that especially perverse human environment, prison, just as they did with Timothy Leary. Jail is a bad enough experience for most, but becomes still worse when 58 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college one is a concentrated target for administrative viciousness from the highest levels. The experiences of soldiers in Southeast Asia were often far worse, of course, for so many were exposed to the combat, other carnage, or the very real threats even from the jungles themselves, but our protests were not free from fear. Before the biggest march, the local newspaper did run our full page ad, but their employees printed it on pink paper, with clear intent to rile a theoretically conservative community. We had no idea how the local cops might behave, it being the the spring of 1968, but after I quite literally had to push a baby carriage out of the way of a semi-truck whose driver was attempting to disrupt our progress in the most physical way, along with several other bits of vicious behavior from the sidelines, we could see the police coming around to begin actively defending us. Other protestors have not fared so well. At Colorado State came another very personally observed introduction to encountering a higher level of government gone out of control. Some associates had been rather idly tossing around plans to follow other anti-war publicity gaining efforts by occupying a campus building. An agent provocateur soon joined into their discussion, with myself observing it all from within the group. In retrospect, he should have been obviously too old, too welldressed, and too expensively coiffured to be believed. At the time, he spoke persuasively, very actively urging the group into taking physical action. Having read Tolkien’s classics by then, this fellow did appear fair enough, but felt somehow foul to me, enough to make my little internal voice keep me uneasy about my own level of participation. Several of the others did want to go along with his suggestions, while I, beyond expressing my unwillingness to either damage property or risk arrest restrained arguing against them from as yet too subtle suspicions. My compromise was limited to carrying supplies into the Agriculture Building during the chosen night beforehand, for the 12 who were going to stay on inside. The next morning something on the order of 300 cops appeared, quite obviously well prepared from all over the state. That suspicious character was clearly revealed, from where I was standing outside, as being both from the FBI and the coordinator of the uniformed response. The 12 setup students were given serious felony raps with maximized sentences, basically destroying the lives of the ones I knew best, even though precious little damage had been done by them to anyone else. They would not have acted as they did without the stimulus provided by the twisted government’s setup man. In the campus newspaper’s weekly literary supplement, I published the following poem as an open letter at about that time. It ran without attribution, seeming like so much else to leave me effectively invisible, but rereading it now, additional meaning for the invective probably makes that just as well, even if I was recognizing links of war to pollution from unleashed oil and justifiably angry at what was happening so closely around me. Thankfully, our rebellion remained peaceful, as did my part within it. In the fall of 1968, it felt like to me that if we could just express some core thoughts a little more creatively a really different society might be possible, with active protesting leading the way. After all, we in the midst of what seemed so clearly to be a particularly foolish war, one that would take us very personally into its maw if it were not stopped very soon. Music in the air was supporting a contention that dramatic change was possible, that our generation was somehow very different than what had come before. Hope was great, even pared by despair, as if often was. Now, these words more clearly cannot be understood as anything but threatening by too many, since the hoped for change has not followed, and even I can see that is not likely to ever do so. Peace and deep understanding are not lasting parts of the shared human condition. 59 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college M ore tangently, and much more happily, thoughts while writing elsewhere of Christmas travel brought back to mind my freshman college year, where, on an outbound flight from Denver, my randomly airline-assigned seat companion turned out to be another CSU student from Syracuse, who was a very large, very obviously Jewish fellow. As we were approaching our intermediate stop in Chicago, the intercom news got more and more distressing, winding up with our plane having a weather-driven diversion to Detroit. Approaching final landing, we were informed that there were at least 12 aircraft ahead of us, all landing in a facility equipped to handle just four, and none were going there intentionally. As the litany continued, the stewardess passing along the distressing report wound up with, “Happy holidays, and thank you for flying United”, at which everyone, very much including her, broke up laughing. Flying was a gentler procedure back then. 60 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college Inside the small terminal was a huge line, but my companion said, “Follow me”, and cut to the head of it, talking directly to the counterperson, whom he conned into placing us on an outbound flight to Syracuse immediately, despite the glares of the more than 400 folks standing somewhat more patiently behind. A rude move, but one for which I was thoroughly grateful. We got to our home airport before we had been scheduled to. At the end of that school year, I wound up riding back to Syracuse with him in his big turquoise Pontiac convertible, towing a motorcycle on a trailer behind. We were amused and appalled by the still-frozen-in-the-middle french fries served by a greasy spoon in Atlantic, Iowa, which retains the title for my worst road food experience ever. We got deeply sunburned passing through all the corn, which grew nearer to the road then than now. There followed some amusement on the Ohio Turnpike, whose concrete sections were so poorly laid that we had to slow to 50 mph to keep the motorbike from bouncing off its unsprung supports. The parallel? Life observed closely, and with just enough caution. Sex, and some of its connections O kay, I’ve covered at least to some extent drugs, and rock and roll, but what about sex? It was certainly not far from the center of what mind I had. My as-yetunobtainable ideal female has already been mentioned, but sex seen logically gets more than a bit silly, beyond its physical messiness. So much time and effort is spent for a rather brief, and often disappointing, interaction, fraught with possibilities for disease and other dangers. Nevertheless, I have been among those spending an often inordinate amount of time questing for it, and even more time thinking about it. One female friend suggested that most people would find tracking one life’s adventures with it “boring”, but I suspect that others might instead find the parallels and diversions to retain some fascination for them, whatever the more serious value, or lack thereof, my stories hold, even without images. Back in high school, I had assumed like most males, that women needed to be pursued, and that they would resist that pursuit if physical contact was the price. Literature generally confirmed that assumption, and I certainly was rejected often enough. I suspect that understanding what I now do, most women want sex as much as men, albeit when often being a different story. Retroactively applied, this knowledge might have made for a better time all around, though it probably would have gotten me in even more trouble. As it was, there were surely opportunities that I quite overlooked. That situation did not change rapidly in college, though pointers were offered and some understanding began to shine through. One of the early examples was CSU’s head cheerleader, who was willing to sit and chat with a freshman marching band member during practices, although not to date him, and who emphasized the need for me to relax, then let things develop slowly with women. I had always pursued the more outstanding examples of beauty, and not just because of Playboy, although its progenitors in photography and painting quite certainly did contribute to that focus, beyond those of Y-chromosome genetics. That selectivity didn’t make it easier for a self-presumed ugly duckling, though it did lead to my father, who was usually not intrusive, once asking me why I thought beauty so important, and then making the unexpected, wry observation that “all cats look grey in the dark”. However, I did manage to grab a seat on my first freshman day next to an especially promising option in my large-scale "Western Civ" section, who came to dominate a vital fraction of my thinking during much of my first two college years. Susie Carr was the daughter of a broken marriage, with a father in Grosse Pointe, Michigan, but based with 61 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college her mother in Jamaica, a modest section of Queens in New York City. Hanging out with her taught me some of that relaxation, albeit in unexpected forms, for she enjoyed sitting, walking, and watching from places and in attitudes that were anything but ordinary. She told me that she would marry the first man who described a cloud as some kind of animal, after I had blown it with a scientific commentary when asked what I saw. Many marriages surely come from a worse start than she envisioned. She did teach me to kiss much more gently than my literature-driven intensity propelled me to try before, which found counterpoint in coming across her, late in that year, thoroughly draped around another man, and clearly not kissing with restraint. That led to a second episode of too much alcohol, and more profitably, to writing a decent short story, one earning a special commendation from a rather jaded English instructor. During the industrial-night-watchman summer that followed, I wrote her weekly, in not-so-shortmanuscript-length letters, which she later said had earned me quite a circle of admirers, since she circulated them among friends. I visited her twice in New York City, once riding around asking cab drivers stopped alongside if they had “innie or outie” navels, but we spent the nights apart, with me in high school friend Paul Henning’s father’s Brooklyn brownstone, or in cheap hotels. She did not return to CSU in the fall, for reasons never made clear, but we continued to write, although with me slowly losing hope and turning to others. At one point, too late, a visiting friend ran across one of her letters, and asked me, “Don’t you realize that this girl is in love with you?” Yet the central words were never said directly, so that I only saw her one more time, with her giving me the most passionate embrace of my life, then asking me to turn around while she walked away, to vanish down one of the exit tunnels at the American Museum of Natural History. However, I did, among all the rest of explorations, manage a few other dates my freshman year, among them once to a "woodsie", which was a mixed group heading into the trees with a keg for libation and lubrication. We travelled to it with 14 others in another dorm resident’s 1949 Packard hearse. Colleen was quite proud of having won the “student body award” in high school. Her brassiere appeared to be the most complex piece of clothing I’ve ever seen, offering what may have been a better defensive tool than the body armor contemporary soldiers wear in Iraq. I only was able to glimpse its outside through sheer blouses, however, and not allowed to even attempt to disassemble it, so that argument remains within a theoretical sphere. T hrough my theater activity, I was gently exposed to still racier alternatives, beginning with Terry Zito taking me to his parent’s home in Denver for freshman year spring break, which became a base while we did backstage work for his high school’s production of Cinderella. Along the way, he introduced me to a variety of his friends, not least a pair of apartment-sharing male bartenders who had dyed their hair green for St. Paddy’s day. Although I had figured out that the rather flaming Charlie Frost, who built sets for our CSU acting group, had a clearly different orientation, it was a quite a while before I put together the pieces about the gayness of much of what I had seen with Terry. If passes were made, they were sufficiently genteel that I didn’t even recognize them. My upbringing had left me utterly unprepared for the practical existence of homosexuality, but I had encountered it already, through a most unpleasant pickup attempt during a Greyhound bus rest stop on my way to Missouri one high school summer. A similarly negative incident followed at one of the less than first-rate New York hotels. Later on, however, having quite a number of good lesbian friends in grad school did ease future 62 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college interactions, so while I consider gay relationships as adding unnecessary additional layers of complexity to already difficult situations, and have no interest in physical participation with other males, I have enjoyed good friendships with gays over the years, eventually feeling honored by encounters where I was found worthy to be flirted with. That level of interaction has helped, too, with more deeply understanding how women feel, in both pluses and minuses about traditionally active male roles. It has particularly highlighted the differences that crudeness of approaches by seekers within any relationships can make. Back nearer the norm, at the end of the first college interval summer in Syracuse, heterosexual things got very hot and close, giving me more useful clues that were not to be interpreted correctly for a while yet. My high school friendships had not extended to “parties”, but this time I was invited to one by one of my graduated classmates, winding up having fun making strange noises on a guitar shared with an enticing very much female cousin of his, Ronnie. When the party was ending, she left with me in my dad’s VW, for a bar she suggested since I was unfamiliar with such local establishments. Then, after a beer, we sought out a deserted road by Onondaga Lake, which I did know about. Eschewing what had been amusingly called "birth control bucket seats" by a quite religious cousin of my own, instead crawling onto the little car’s fold down back seat, I was thoroughly enjoying caressing her breasts when she responded to the cramped space by saying first, “Why are we doing this—”, scaring me, but then adding, “Here. My parents aren’t home tonight.” Accordingly we repaired to her bedroom. I had long carried a condom in my wallet for just such an opportunity, but when we reached the moment of need, we could not find that wallet among our scattered clothing. Having tasted her wanting wetness, with immediate desire adding to paranoia, while having some doubts about safety anyway, due to the accumulated wear on the missing item, I came on her belly. We found the wallet shortly afterwards, but she said it was getting too late, and I had better skedaddle to avoid negative reports to her parents from the neighbors. The lasting clue was how much she clearly wanted the sex, psychologically and physiologically. Unfortunately, by choosing the bar that she knew, someone there had recognized her and told her fiancé, who put the kibosh on my seeing her again. Upon returning to CSU for my sophomore year, instead of continuing to live in a dorm, I joined three other guys in renting a two-bedroom apartment. This base with greater independence allowed my sexual interactions to continue towards full achievement. I cannot remember the girl I was with, or just how far we got, but can readily conjure a picture of my immediate roommate’s surprise and annoyance when he found that I’d locked the bedroom door while playing fairly seriously on my narrow bed. It may have been the same girl recollected as being glad about not intensively pursuing further. She had kissed in a frightening fashion, opening her mouth as far as it would go after making contact. I’d then backed off, as that aggressiveness made more obvious a general lack of cleanliness. She was soon revealed by another friend to have been as willing in all ways as anyone might like, but she left him a dangerous gift of syphilis, for which he was being annoyingly treated, though as a student of history, quite grateful that a cure had become available. That second fall quarter at CSU involved sufficiently advanced courses to make it quite apparent that I had to start paying more attention to studying, but it also did provide an especially memorable college-sponsored trip. Their football program had been abysmal for too many years, but in that fall of 1966, a second-string quarterback unexpectedly allowed the team to catch fire. As the players started winning, our marching band was allowed to travel with them to provide more cheering support. At the Air Force Academy, we watched Wolfe hide the ball behind his back as he rambled for a 60+-yard gain, among other effective 63 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college stunts. We could see what he was doing, but the other teams could not. The corker for us became an overnight venture to Logan. At that time, Utah State University was considered a national power, having players like the now-legendary pro tackle Merlin Olsen. For that adventure, when the buses arrived in the freshening snow on CSU’s oval for us on a November Friday, we were told that the "Snow Chi Minh Trail", Interstate 80 across Wyoming, was closed by incoming weather, so we would have to go via Loveland Pass, an irony given its more than 12,000-foot altitude, and the Eisenhower Tunnel still incomplete. Where this tied to sex was the much greater travel time involved. It meant that my prettyenough sax-player seatmate, after our bus made an all too exciting run up the slippery road over the pass, fell asleep on my shoulder, and I followed her into dreamland during the long ride across western Colorado. I had finally slept with a woman, in very close contact, albeit not in the sense commonly intended for that phrase! Waking from that brief cohabitation in space and dreams provided a moment that has lastingly remained among the funniest in my life. Being raised RLDS included hundreds of hours of horror stories about how Brigham Young had perverted Joseph Smith Jr.’s religion, becoming essentially the Antichrist. At the time, I was still pretty much a believer. When I opened my eyes just before dawn, our bus was stopped directly in front of the brilliantly illuminated Mormon Temple in Salt Lake City, which I had never seen in person, let alone close up, but which I knew well from images. Emerging from sleep, with that intricately carved stonework and glittering golden statue of Moroni dominating the view, my thoughts ran, (1) I am dead, and (2) what I had believed was wrong. Hell must be the next stop. As more active consciousness returned, more realistic laughter followed, along with a pleasant resurgence of awareness of contact with my seatmate’s body. Our team did win that football game that afternoon, so the athletic department, appreciating the band’s support, treated us to a steak dinner at Little America, a rare treat for students on budgets as small as mine, while the buses paused in the thick fog covering our return. My earlier companion, sadly, had a more distant seat. T hings did get rapidly more interesting with the new year, after I had returned from my Christmas visit home. My new digs were a two-bedroom apartment in "Party Manor", shared with just one guy, H. Russell May. That acquaintanceship was probably less useful for him than for me by the end of the next five months. As I told his mother after she accused me of responsibility for his flunking out of school, “Mrs. May, in the second quarter that we shared the place, I got a 4.0”, albeit without mentioning my lifetime low 1.2 grade point for the first, or the mono that allowed me to drop the quantitative analysis class that I was failing in the second. We surely did have a good time (most of the time) along the way, but I do wish I could have been a more helpful friend. The difference between us may have been my inherited pinch-pennyness, since I figured that classes cost $3 each, had been paid for in advance, and, like treating a movie that cost the same amount, I wasn’t about to miss any, while more generous, free wheeling Russ routinely blew them off. Among his temptations, Russ had a near-new Comet convertible, used mercilessly, with him willing, on several occasions, to drive the 190 miles to newly opened Vail so that I could ski (with lift tickets of all of $7). He would simply hang out in the lodge, ogling the girls. The car’s top was always down, rain, shine, or snow. Once we found that if the speed was kept at typical freeway levels, even a heavy thunderstorm would not dampen use directly, though the rear footwells and seat filled with water, until we had to slow down. We experimented mildly creatively in other bachelor ways, many ironic in retrospect, like running both the apartment’s air-conditioner and the heater to see which was more 64 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college powerful, since unlimited utilities were already included in the rent. We explored what the water inside a dishwasher looked like by running it with its door open, finding not very surprisingly that much if it comes out at high speed. We tested a hypothesis we’d heard that putting a raisin on an electric stove burner turned to full high would cause the raisin to swell to the size of the original grape, and then explode in an impressive puff of flame. It did, while leaving a permanent mark upon the burner and a mystery for future tenants, for that demonstration was repeated many times, for ourselves and to entertain friends. The worst experiment, though, at least for the stove, was the day we decided to bake a cake. I had said I’d fairly routinely helped my mother do that, so we got a box of cake mix and whipped it together according to its instructions. “Hey, Russ, it all fits into one pan. Why wash two?” The oven had a window in its door, so we merely watched it develop stalactites (instead of removing it), as the mix irresistibly expanded over the single pan’s edge. Months later, after considerable ongoing curing from being left undisturbed while other stuff had baked, those now thoroughly blackened columns proved impossible to fully remove. The exterior of our building suffered, too, probably still bearing a chipped brick from our trials of whether an Elvis record was, as its label had proclaimed, indestructible. Putting it under the rear wheel of the Comet and popping the clutch was indeed more deadly to the building than to the record, whose vinyl shape finally gave in to the dry cycle of the dishwasher, melting into what became a large ashtray after it had draped itself over the dishholding tines. In between such nonsense, there were a whole lot more girls, with me slowly touching them more intimately. First in memory comes Yvonne, a sinuous beauty with whom I danced, in our underwear, to Russ’s fine stereo system. She wore a delightfully transparent bra, though we went no further, respecting the fine lines of her interpretation of Catholicism. In tight rotation on that record player, whether either of us was alone or in company, were the Beatles’ Rubber Soul, the Rolling Stones’ 12x4, with the original “Spider and the Fly” (which was subtly and amusingly reprised so very much later on Stripped), and the Velvet Underground and Nico, with its peelable banana cover. With acid then came The Seeds, which one needs to be thoroughly stoned to appreciate. Along the way, there followed a classmate already engaged and pregnant, but who definitely enjoyed pushing limits with me just as far as they could go without genital penetration. I seem to remember her mouth being quite interestingly employed, among other active talents. Before dropping out of school, she turned me over to her roommate, another Deborah, who had professed to believe in free love. With her I had one of the craziest days ever, skiing in the then utilized area within Rocky Mountain Park, grossing out old friend Dave Colley, whom we’d conned into taking us up in his drag-racing-championship Dodge convertible, with her stories. Dave, who was then a supermarket clerk, had turned me on to the Grateful Dead with their very first commercially released album (on eight track tape), but he was a gently conservative soul at heart, and she was well beyond his tastes. Back in the apartment, by the wee hours I was to third base, but she, in her panties alone, abruptly stood up, said, “You’re not him”, dressed, and left, with the stinging accusation, “You are mediocre”. I’ve not heard of her, or her distant Navy pilot lover, since. However, the timing and some other details seem just right enough that this distant competitor might well have been recent presidential candidate John McCain. Not too long afterwards, though, my own divide was passed. Plain Joyce came visiting 65 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college with another girl I had been after, but the target of my original desire spent the night on our couch, while her friend slipped into my bed. The concluding step was honestly somewhat of a disappointment, even repeated the full five times like a braggart friend had claimed was the proper goal for such an evening’s entertainment. Two weeks later came the plaintive phone call, “I’m late”, followed by considerable worry and ribbing about shotgun weddings. Eventually nature favored us, as late is all she was. The mononucleosis episode soon ensued, with sleeping 18 hours a day while attending some classes leaving little time for feminine adventure. That was followed by discovering LSD, with its involvements being more internal. The exception fit Warren Zevon’s classic line, “I went home with the waitress, like I always do.” Dawna fittingly enough worked at Luby’s (a cafeteria chain primarily located in Texas), although I had met her when she was literally under another guy on a couch after I’d entered a friend’s house. Somehow we wound up together, with me fascinated by her shy unwillingness to be seen naked, even after we had consummated the relationship, for she had nothing to be ashamed of. Dawna remains the only woman I dated who was taller than I. While her height itself did not bother me, her hands, which were considerably larger than mine, for some reason did. Though there were some good times, she was rather scarily unbalanced inside, which served as the most active impetus to do more careful research when I got home from college for the summer. That, in turn, led directly to the woman who never afterwards was too far away from my quieter thoughts, and, much later, became my lasting wife. F inding the right woman for the long term during that following summer didn’t deter me from further searching when I returned to CSUfor my junior year, though. With a car of my own at last, I had taken a small basement room in a carved up old mansion, with a hotplate to cook on and no refrigerator. That helped concentration on my studies, at least for a while, but before too long I got to move into a more scenic room upstairs. One night it was shared with an art student, enjoying her breasts and her mind, almost certainly in that order, but no more. Her best friend was a svelte, team-letter athlete, with whom I did spend some time skiing, and who, most surprisingly, showed up featured in a full-page picture in the Tuli Kupferberg (of the Fugs) classic, One Thousand and One Ways to Beat the Draft, which was a concept of immense importance to males of my vintage at the time. That particular connection still boggles my mind, for she had not participated in our Vietnam War protests, as far as I knew, and she was definitely the kind of woman that I tend to notice, while her all-American appearance hardly fit with the grungy New York City protest/ arts scene. One never knows where even brief connections will lead. The more immediately classic character among that diverse impromptu household was Morgan, who turned out to be a just-returned Marine lance corporal from the front lines in Vietnam. He hung out most often with some heavy motorcycle types, and at first I only knew him as a fairly small, quiet, but interesting guy to talk with about odd perceptions. The military part first came out when we were idly chatting with him sitting on the only chair in my room, away from the door, at the far side of the bed on which I was perched. One of the big goons yelled for him, cursing at me for some reason, and then started pounding on the door, which broke under the strain. I half noticed that Morgan had disappeared from his seat, but he reappeared, surprising all of us. He sprang out of a crouch, swinging a hidden fist that laid the goon out cold. Morgan then said that surviving the jungle had taught him to get down and move quickly while low, with traditional Marines teaching him to make such knuckle work instinctive. 66 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college On the distaff side, from the lot who flowed into and out of that house, one related afternoon featured a lass who quite quickly removed her lower accouterments with me, but would not let me see her top. In those few moments, it is likely that she became the one who left me with the lifelong, all-too-regularly recurring trial of genital herpes. On the other hand, that nasty acquisition instead may have followed my move shortly afterwards to the locally infamous 714 Remington, a converted frat house with individually rented rooms, the only place I know of that had its street address changed to try to erase its reputation in later years. My immediate neighbor turned out to be a narc, albeit one who freely indulged in some of the products he was to bust several others for. Along the way, I got really tired of Cream’s "Brave Ulysses", heard through the thin walls at 3 AM, although I did enjoy repetitions of Fever Tree’s "San Francisco Girls". I will give him credit; his arresting cohorts did differentiate between the few guys who were dealing to high school kids and/or using needles for their choices, from the simple herbal smokers and occasional acidheads like me. At 714, Jeanne Kantor became my most serious involvement in that chapter of my life. It began with sitting down next to her one March evening in an open aisle seat in the campus theater, while she was holding another guy’s hand on the far side, just before a master class being held by the marvelous character actor Roscoe Lee Browne began. By the time he walked down the aisle toward us, well into his presentation, I was holding her other hand, a combination which Browne noticed. The closely focused double-take look he gave us— without letting the other fellow see it—remains absolutely priceless. Somehow, Jeanne and I managed to communicate where my room was, and that she would join me there after she dumped the guy she had been with. I really didn’t expect it, but a knock on the door came shortly after 1 AM. The next morning, she noticed blood on the sheet and said, “Oh fudge”. I thought that was a pretty interesting way to respond to losing one’s virginity, but she soon disabused me. It was revealed as just a bit of menstrual leftover. She congratulated me for being her seventh lover, thereby having made her officially promiscuous according to Colorado law, of which she was quite clearly proud. Definitely not my mother’s kind of woman. Soon enough, these Hollywood-ish plot lines expanded further, on the day after we saw The Graduate together. As we walked along the tree-lined campus center on a bright afternoon, her barely-34-year-old mother, whom I had not met before, drove up in a new, white MG, top down. Although that correlation went nowhere further, it did provide a quite fascinating train of thoughts, and for more than a few moments. Jeannie was quite into theoretical witchcraft, which led to another unexplainable moment when I turned off an annoyingly noisy electric clock by pointing my finger at it, finding that the gesture coinciding with the device’s plug pulling out of the wall socket. Pretty strange coincidence, if that. Less esoterically, she led me to taking her back to Syracuse at the end of the school year, with all her goods and her cat (which we had named Marat, after the Collins song about the French revolutionary) jammed for a long, hot trip into fearless Snoopy the Volvo. Within a month after our arrival, my high school best friend wound up with her, and my father got the cat, while I went back to Kathy, for another yet temporary while. That all came about because Jeannie and I had found an inexpensive apartment for her near Syracuse University. Things had been getting more than a little uneasy between us by the time we went to visit Paul Henning (not the one who became the Beverly Hillbillies producer, but one who just shared his name). Almost immediately, seeing those two together, 67 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college I thought, “What am I doing here?” There was some scattershot interaction between Jeannie and I during the fadeout, but they shortly thereafter wound up going to Hawaii, where Paul ran a photography business and they officially married. Jeannie had regularly expressed a desire to be a Playmate, while Paul had long wanted to work for that magazine, so I was not surprised, a few years later, to see an image in Playboy that looked an awful lot like her, with its styling very much like Paul’s work. Ironically for both, whether or not my assumption was correct, there were no credits given for either the woman or the image maker. About 15 years later, I heard that Paul, living alone in Chicago, had committed suicide. If still alive, Jeannie has left no readily findable trace. While tragedy sometimes flows in my wake, it was not intentional. M y senior year was yet foggier at times. The month of November became one of my first serious experiments with getting closer to the mountains, and yet maintaining unsophisticated simplicity at the same time. I rented a very small trailer well up in Rist Canyon, where my water source originated by breaking ice in the neighboring stream. Even with two electric space heaters running full blast, any water left in the inside sink would be quite frozen in the morning. It was pretty enough up there, especially the stars during one last acid trip, but living there was not sustainable without a lot more effort than I had available, mentally or physically. More generally, it also taught, most memorably, how expensive and at the same time how ineffective trying to heat spaces with electricity was. The practical limits of the little trailer lead to my finding a house for rent alongside the main road north to Laramie, Wyoming, across from the dam containing Terry Lake, and next to the Bottle Shop liquor store that had long defined one of the city limits of Fort Collins. That city was still officially dry, with "3.2" beer being the exception. I do clearly remember Terry Zito bringing a circus of actors through that house one night, and my dancing with great sexual intensity with one of the crew. Not being able to work out a trade for my evening’s date with the guy she came in left us unable carry through the so clearly mutually desired connection. It remains a most stimulating memory, fitting well with some of the erotic pre-Columbian pottery I was being exposed to, from a course taught by a female historian whose collection extended that far, and who shared its images with selected students. One connection that I did thoroughly complete, though, was with ranchers’ daughter Elaine, whom I had met one day while walking across the campus. Her orgasms were the first I could readily feel, even through a condom. Five years later we were still in touch, when she gave me another incredible evening. One irreplaceable part came by just sitting and drinking right at fiddler Peter Knight’s feet during a Steeleye Span concert, during that band’s absolute peak, at the erstwhile sports bar Ebbett’s Field in Denver, though later that evening was quite nice, too. Bodies and music were our closest forms of communication, 68 Terence Yorks Trying to Make Sense—in college however, which became clear as her mother told stories that finished that relationship off. Those followed our own realization about how we had seen a variety of events, but our separate versions of them did not even come close to matching. We had inserted pictures for each other’s personalities that just did not resemble their relative truth, though we had done so without malice, and with enough overlap to allow our relationship to grow for a good long while. Nevertheless, it found a clear dead end, however much pleasure had come at moments in the interim. At the end of my senior school year, the college newspaper closed with this poem, 69