***Of This And That
In The Old North Adamsville Neighborhood-In
Search Of…..Lost Yearbooks
From The Pen Of Frank
Jackman
I have spent not a little time
lately touting the virtues of the Internet in allowing me and the members of
the North Adamsville Class of 1964, or what is left of it, the remnant that has
survived and is findable with the new technologies to communicate with each
other some fifty years and many miles later on a class website recently set up
to gather in classmates for our 50th anniversary reunion. (Some will never be found by choice or by
being excluded from the “information super-highway” that they have not been
able to navigate.) Interestingly those who have joined the site have, more or
less, felt free to send me private e-mails telling me stories about what
happened back in the day in school or what has happened to them since their
jailbreak from the confines of the old town.
Some stuff is interesting to a
point, you know, those endless tales about the doings and not doings of the
grandchildren, odd hobbies and other ventures taken up in retirement and so on
although not worthy of me making a little off-hand commentary on. Some stuff is
either too sensitive or too risqué to publish on a family-friendly site. Some
stuff, some stuff about the old days and what did, or did not, happened to, or
between, fellow classmates, you know the boy-girl thing (other now acceptable
relationships were below the radar then) has naturally perked my interest.
But there have been other topics
of interest as well. One that hit home, hit me deep in my angst-ridden soul
involved a fateful loss of a class yearbook, the Magnet. I was all ears on
that one not only because as you will find out in the story I will relate to
you an untoward thing happened to a classmate’s yearbook which caused a
traumatic experience but because I know exactly where my copy of the Magnet is and why it is lost. I had been
so eager to shake the dust of the old town off my shoes, had had so many
fallings-out, had been shunned some many times, and had more than my fair
quotient of teen-age angst and alienation that shortly after graduation I threw
the damn thing in the Neptune River that runs through the old town. While I
have no particular regrets about having done that action then it did leave me
without a visual frame of reference in dealing with class memories as the 50th
anniversary reunion approached. Not to fear though through the miracle of modern
technology every year’s edition of the Magnet
since North Adamsville High’s opening in 1926 is now on-line via the town’s
Thomas Parker Public Library system, Nice, huh. Better the class website has a
convenient link to that source right on the home page so it is just a click
away. That technological marvel will not however fully solve classmate Marilyn
Madden’s problem.
The name Marilyn Madden is not
just any name in North Adamsville Class of 1964 lore, but a key name. She was
involved in almost every intellectually interesting activity at the school and
had been crowned senior year by her classmates codified by a photo in the Magnet as the class genius-female side.
(As I mentioned to Marilyn when she contacted me about her yearbook story I had
not voted for her but rather Lila Rosenberg. Marilyn expressed to me that she had
been surprised that she had won and confided in me that she had voted for Lila
also. Which is neither here nor there except to show a modest streak. Moreover Marilyn
was very smart and the honor was not really misplaced.) Everybody and I believe
rightly so thought she would go far. Moreover she had a certain pedigree. Her
forbears, including her parents, were well-known in academic circles as
professors at the local religious college. She had endlessly dreamed of going
to Wellesley College, her first choice and had been urged on in that dream by
many teachers, particularly her English teacher, Mr. Holly.
Well, for whatever reason Marilyn did
not get into Wellesley. She wasn’t sure why not and I did not press the issue
at this far remove. So she needed to scurry to find another college. Some
college who could provide scholarship money given her parent’s well-known lack
of funds since in those days professors were at local colleges were not
particularly well paid. Eventually Marilyn thorough Mr. Holly found a
scholarship spot at well-respected Perkins College out in Iowa (I know, I know
Iowa is hardly the right spot for an ocean-bred young woman from the shores of
North Adamsville but what can you do when there is no dough around and some
decent college is glad to have you). Although this college was far from home,
she had no connections in Iowa and, despite her activities resume, considered
herself a shy person (that only found out by me recently to my surprise because
she seemed a very self-assured young woman back then when I mentioned that I
had been shy), left North Adamsville in the late summer of 1964 filled with
hopes. Apparently with plenty of luggage as well from the way she describe her
train ride out there. That luggage including her record collection and…her cherished
Magnet. And, as many of us, many of us who felt the
wanderlust in those days, the many of us that I call in shorthand the
generation of ’68, Marilyn secretly thrilled once she arrived in Iowa to be
away from the glare of family and high school friends.
Marilyn told me she adjusted pretty
well at first, found solace in a group of young people who had imbibed the
1960s folk minute, you know Bob Dylan, Joan Baez, Dave Van Ronk and the like,
as she had (and I had as well). She found the classes interesting and was
moving along pretty well. Freshman year passed easily (helped by she said
finding her first real boyfriend out there and by implication, or my fervent
imagination maybe have learned a thing or two in the boy meets girl
department). Excited that summer she came home and had been looking forward to
her sophomore year. That school year started uneventfully enough but somehow
that boyfriend thing did not work out (he found some other girl) and she felt
lonesome all of a sudden. Worse, and critical for our story, something awful
happened in the late fall. Somehow if you can believe this out in the bloody
cornfields of Iowa there was some kind of gang of thieves who specialized in
ripping off college students in their dorms. One day (most of these thefts were
done during the day while students were out according to the local police)
Marilyn’s dorm room was hit with all her belongings taken…including of all
things her precious Magnet and that
prized record collection. She was distraught, frantic, especially over the loss
of that yearbook. Marilyn finished her sophomore year but when she came home
that next summer she told her parents she was dropping out. They freaked out to
use the language of the times but she stuck to her guns. Several years later she
went to another local college, graduated with honors, went on to have a
successful career in publishing, got married and had a couple of children. A
full life. But for years that theft of her Magnet
weighted on her. She tried every possible way to get a copy, any kind of copy
but to no avail with such a specialized publication. Until now. Now Marilyn joins
me via cyberspace in looking through the on-line Magnet when we cut up torches about the old days. Nice, huh…
Oh yeah, Marilyn, here is a
folk song via a YouTube film clip from the early 1960s to "replace"
one of the ones stolen from you out in the cornfields of Iowa.
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