Growing up and living life as a baby boomer is and has been an exciting and fun roller coaster life.
Monday, March 27, 2017
Friends
I have had trouble in writing the next chapter in my story about how much fun it has been to grow up as a Baby Boomer. The subject of how coming home from college the first year for Christmas vacation has caused a lot of thought about friends. I think the old saying about how you can't go home again sort of kept running through my mind.
The really funny part about writing about friends and home has come at a time when I have been spiffing up the house for a high school class party. By a stroke of luck a high school friend posted on Facebook this morning "You never forget the neighborhood kids you grew up with". How true not only of the neighborhood kids but all the kids you spent the first eighteen years of your life with.
I guess I was lucky in the fact that I did get to stay in my hometown until I graduated from high school. After that it was fifty years of moving all over the country and only staying in one place for a few years. Yes, I always made lots of new friends, had many great experiences but it is difficult to form the bonds that growing up with the same group of people forms.
My twentieth class reunion was the first one I attended and I have only missed a couple since. It is very hard to describe how it felt to go back and see all the people I had grown up with. Maybe all the moving around made it feel like I had actually come "home". There is something very special about being able to see someone you haven't seen in twenty or even fifty years and feel like you just talked to them yesterday.
The first eighteen years of our lives maybe the most challenging years if you stop and think about it. There is so much to learn in how to make and maintain friendships. So many insecurities and a lot of disappointments that seemed huge at the time. It is funny but at the last class reunion one of the girls said it was difficult for her to read my stories since I had so much fun growing up and she didn't. I had to laugh as she was one of those girls I wanted to be like since she was pretty, popular and a good student. One of the boys whose voice I recognized before I even saw him told me he always wanted to ask me for a date but never did because I was cute, popular and one of the rich kids (not hardly). We all did have our little insecurities.
The really great part of reconnecting with my high school class is that through the years I have gained friendships with classmates I did not know that well back then. I feel bad for those class members who don't come to our class parties. Not everyone has great memories of high school but I think they need to realize that the people you grew up with are the best friends you can have. We share so many experiences, good and bad, that we are all bonded for life.
Maybe "home" is not a location on the map or a house on a street but the shared memories and fun times you have had with those you grew up with. Every time I get the chance to see all my classmates I feel like I have gone home.
Thursday, February 16, 2017
Funny How We Learn Some Lessons
Stephens in the Snow
The interesting thing about Stephens College was that they really encouraged all students to investigate areas of interest in the first two years. They did not bog students down with all those required classes that everyone hates. The only ones they required were Physical Education, an English course and one called Ideas in Living Today. They encouraged venturing out and trying new things.
Sounded good to me so when the first snow fell sometime around Thanksgiving I jumped at the chance to go rabbit hunting with a boy I had been going out with. First of all, I love snow. Growing up in Muskogee, Oklahoma we rarely ever had any but Columbia had lots of it. The thought of tramping through the snow in the woods close to town was rather exciting. Pam said recently in an email that she remembered the snow in Columbia but I got the idea that living in LA she hasn't seen any since.
The Sidewalk to My Dorm
The next thing to note is that my only experience with a gun was when I was seven years old. My brother had a BB gun that you had to cock before you fired it. Well, the first time I tried that I got part of the palm of my hand caught in the stupid thing and had to have seven stitches. At least I didn't shoot my eye out. My parents never owned a gun except one Christmas my Mother bought my Dad a shotgun thinking he would like to hunt. At age eleven even I knew my Dad was not going to go walking through the woods in his suit, tie and hat for any reason. Don't know what ever happened to the shotgun that never came out of the box.
I cannot remember the boys name so I could not have been too interested in him but I do remember he had a car which was a very big deal. Off we went to someplace out by Stephens lake. He should have had somewhat of a clue when I did not know how to hold the rifle. After a few instructions on where the trigger was, how to load and aim the thing we went on search of rabbits. I was very happy just walking through the snow and the thought that I was expected to slay a rabbit never entered my little blonde head.
All of a sudden a rabbit popped up in the snow right in front of us. That was right after he had scolded me about not talking so much or making so much noise. Guessed it was like fishing (I had gone fishing a couple of times) so you did not scare the creatures away. Actually I did not see a rabbit. I saw Thumper and as the boy whispered to me to take aim, Thumper and I made eye contact. At that point I yelled, "You have got to be kidding!" He took the rifle out of my hand and headed for the car. It was a long, silent trip back to the dorm. Needless to say I never saw him again.
That one hunting experience taught me that I would never be able to look at an animal without seeing Thumper or Bugs Bunny or Bambi or Bambi's parents. Fishing became impossible for me when I could not equate their gasping for breath as the compassionate thing to do. I have no problem with other people owning guns and hunting or fishing. But that one beautiful snow covered day taught me something that has stayed with me the rest of my life.
Most of trying of new things worked out better than the hunting episode. Pam, who lived in the room next door, wanted to go to Temple and explore her Father's religion. She did not want to go alone so on Friday nights I went with her. I only knew one Jewish boy growing up and he was the one who broke the date to the Prom with me. Always being curious about different religions I learned a lot about it and gained a lot of respect for the religion and the people. Pam and I even took Hebrew lessons each week from the Rabbi. It is funny how much Hebrew I actually remember after all these years.
Christmas was the first time we were allowed to go home. While I looked forward to it there was some apprehension. All my classes were going well except for one "C" in golf which is a long story. I knew I had changed a lot in my attitudes about things and wondered how being at home would feel like. It turned out to be very interesting.
The interesting thing about Stephens College was that they really encouraged all students to investigate areas of interest in the first two years. They did not bog students down with all those required classes that everyone hates. The only ones they required were Physical Education, an English course and one called Ideas in Living Today. They encouraged venturing out and trying new things.
Sounded good to me so when the first snow fell sometime around Thanksgiving I jumped at the chance to go rabbit hunting with a boy I had been going out with. First of all, I love snow. Growing up in Muskogee, Oklahoma we rarely ever had any but Columbia had lots of it. The thought of tramping through the snow in the woods close to town was rather exciting. Pam said recently in an email that she remembered the snow in Columbia but I got the idea that living in LA she hasn't seen any since.
The next thing to note is that my only experience with a gun was when I was seven years old. My brother had a BB gun that you had to cock before you fired it. Well, the first time I tried that I got part of the palm of my hand caught in the stupid thing and had to have seven stitches. At least I didn't shoot my eye out. My parents never owned a gun except one Christmas my Mother bought my Dad a shotgun thinking he would like to hunt. At age eleven even I knew my Dad was not going to go walking through the woods in his suit, tie and hat for any reason. Don't know what ever happened to the shotgun that never came out of the box.
I cannot remember the boys name so I could not have been too interested in him but I do remember he had a car which was a very big deal. Off we went to someplace out by Stephens lake. He should have had somewhat of a clue when I did not know how to hold the rifle. After a few instructions on where the trigger was, how to load and aim the thing we went on search of rabbits. I was very happy just walking through the snow and the thought that I was expected to slay a rabbit never entered my little blonde head.
All of a sudden a rabbit popped up in the snow right in front of us. That was right after he had scolded me about not talking so much or making so much noise. Guessed it was like fishing (I had gone fishing a couple of times) so you did not scare the creatures away. Actually I did not see a rabbit. I saw Thumper and as the boy whispered to me to take aim, Thumper and I made eye contact. At that point I yelled, "You have got to be kidding!" He took the rifle out of my hand and headed for the car. It was a long, silent trip back to the dorm. Needless to say I never saw him again.
That one hunting experience taught me that I would never be able to look at an animal without seeing Thumper or Bugs Bunny or Bambi or Bambi's parents. Fishing became impossible for me when I could not equate their gasping for breath as the compassionate thing to do. I have no problem with other people owning guns and hunting or fishing. But that one beautiful snow covered day taught me something that has stayed with me the rest of my life.
Most of trying of new things worked out better than the hunting episode. Pam, who lived in the room next door, wanted to go to Temple and explore her Father's religion. She did not want to go alone so on Friday nights I went with her. I only knew one Jewish boy growing up and he was the one who broke the date to the Prom with me. Always being curious about different religions I learned a lot about it and gained a lot of respect for the religion and the people. Pam and I even took Hebrew lessons each week from the Rabbi. It is funny how much Hebrew I actually remember after all these years.
Christmas was the first time we were allowed to go home. While I looked forward to it there was some apprehension. All my classes were going well except for one "C" in golf which is a long story. I knew I had changed a lot in my attitudes about things and wondered how being at home would feel like. It turned out to be very interesting.
Friday, February 10, 2017
Life With Cathie
Cathie |
The lessons learned in college are so much more than what you learn in classes and from books. It is almost like the day you arrive on campus the door at home closed behind you and suddenly you are on your own. How well you succeed academically, the people you meet and the choices you make are now up to you. There is suddenly no one around to tell you what to do or who you can or cannot be friends with. Lots of freedom all of a sudden but also lots of responsibility not to make a mess of it.
Then there was Cathie. It was a rocky start between us from the moment she walked into our room on the day we all arrived on campus.
Naturally she was a couple of hours late getting to the room when we all arrived on campus at the same time. She always laughed about my mouth dropping open when she walked in and said that I must be her roomie. Besides the big blue eyes, the perfect figure and the blonde hair she was like a magnet and just made people want to be around her. My best guess was that she was late because she had met half the people in Columbia on her way to the dorm. Our dorm room became the hangout for every girl she met on campus.
I was totally unprepared to deal with someone who from outwardly appearances did not have a care in the world, never met a stranger or someone she did not like or someone that did not her. She could pick up a dress off of her closet floor and look like she stepped out of a magazine. She changed my name on the little sign on our door from Donna to Dee. In Cat's world the sky was the limit, there was not a rule that could not be broken or anything you could not do. I had officially entered an alternate universe whether I wanted to or not.
Actually it did not take long to get over my differences with her. Within two weeks I had blonde hair again. My neat little stacks of folded clothes disappeared and we were partaking the free beer for Stephens Susies' at the local clubs on Sunday afternoons. If she thought I was miffed at her about something she would wait until I went to bed and then sit on my bed with that huge teddy bear she slept with and tell stories until we were both laughing. There would be many nights in that year when we stayed up most of the night laughing not because I was mad at her but from the stories each had to tell about some of our daily adventures.
Cat had an incredible knack of getting herself out of situations that could have been really bad. One night we had accepted dates with two very handsome boys to a party at a house. It was fun for a couple of hours but then it got a little too serious for both of us. We excused ourselves to the bathroom and after a little discussion decided it was best to leave... via the bathroom window. We laughed all the way back to the dorm about the locked bathroom door we had left behind. Then there was the time she had a date with a guy on a motorcycle. We could not wear slacks so she rolled the legs of her pants up under her skirt. Somehow she lost her skirt so she had me throw her a skirt from our fourth floor window so she could get in the dorm in PROPER attire.
There was an all black night club a little ways out of Columbia. Definitely off limits since it was not in the city limits but they had really great performers do shows there. Could we really miss seeing Jerry Lee Lewis? It didn't take long to decide it was the chance of a lifetime so....
we hitchhiked out to the club. It was quite noticeable that we were the only two blonde haired, blue eyed white girls in the place. I actually think the crowd was more afraid of us than we were of them. It was Jerry Lee in his leopard suit, jump on the piano days and great fun. We went back weeks later and saw Ike and Tina Turner. Hitchhiking in those days was fun and Cat had a way of staying out of bad situations that was amazing. If questioned about where we went to school we always said the University of Missouri since those girls did not have strict rules that Stephens did.
There was one evening that we actually did not break any school rules.
One of our friends from Westminster College had gotten hurt playing football with friends and got kicked in the spleen. He was brought to Columbia to have his spleen removed and called to say he was wanted company after surgery. What our friends for but to visit ailing people in the hospital. Cat and I walked to the hospital to find Buddy was starving to death. What he needed was a pizza. So we got him dressed and sneaked him out of the hospital and off to get a pizza. Luckily we got him back by the end of visiting hours and he did not get caught. Wonder if he remembers that evening?
Cat kept a diary so each evening before bed we both wrote the stories of the day. I wish I had mine now as I can imagine there is a lot I don't remember but there was also a lot that perhaps I never wanted my mother to see. Cat's dad was the President of a bank and I have often wondered if he taught her to write in her check book in black ink when there was money in the account but change to red ink when she was overdrawn. Sounded like a good idea to me because when both Dad's called to let us know we were overdrawn we knew exactly how much we needed for them to deposit. Can't say that it didn't take me years to get over that little practice.
As much as it may sound that we went completely wild those first few weeks at Stephens College it was really not the case. I have to really thank Stephens in how strict the rules were and how busy they kept us.
I had a Monday night class, sorority meetings on Tuesday night, mandatory Vespers on Wednesday night, an 8:00 am class on Saturday morning and curfew hours. Cat and I both were good students and there was plenty of hours spent hitting the books. Values learned at home were not completely thrown aside.
There are still a few more stories to tell about that year, the important lessons learned and the lifelong friends made. It is interesting to really go back and concentrate on remembering all that went on that year.
Rather amazing how one school year can affect the rest of your life.
Thursday, January 26, 2017
The Cast of Characters
After sending out the story last week I got and email from Pam. She wondered what I meant in my list of questions when I wondered what we all would have done without her in our little group. Also how it was amazing how we all thought the other person was so outgoing and we wanted to be like them.
To say the least the eight of us were a very diverse group of eight girls. Without telling too much about the years in between 1964/65 and now I will say that Pam, Cathie and I managed to stay friends all these years. Cathie and I found Erin in the eighties and just in the last year we added Sally. The whereabouts of Paula, Mary and Woodie are unknown but they still may pop up one of these days.
Before I tell all the silly stories of the year at Stephens I need to give a brief description of the eight of us that were thrown together. These are my observations looking back fifty years with some insight as to how at least five of us turned out as adults. On the whole it is a lesson that people really don't change much even with life's challenges.
I will start with Mary and Erin who were Cathie and my suite mates which means we had a connecting bathroom. Mary was actually rather quiet, very pretty and at times very dramatic. Do I remember her saying several times she wanted to kill herself? I can't remember why or how we talked her out of it but maybe she was just lost in the dynamics of the group and it was a good way to get attention. It could also have been living with Erin.
The best way to describe Erin was that she was a mess. I must say that I loved her clothes and lucky for me we were the same size. She had the world's largest collection of plaid pleated shirts, matching sweaters and knee socks. She took her shirts to the cleaners and had triple starch put in them so you could wear them for days and they never wrinkled.
She was very smart with a dry sense of humor that made us roll on the floor in laughter. It seemed like she had a date every night and Cathie accused her often of dating the entire army based at Fort Leonard Wood
She would just laugh and go on. It was amazing to see her twenty-five years later and hear about her life. She still had the triple starched shirts and knee socks.
Paula, in front, Erin and Mary, in back |
Woodie and Sally were two who had their differences and living together was a challenge - a funny one to all of us - but still a challenge.
Best way to describe Woodie is to say I have never in my life met someone so naive. She had these huge puppy dog eyes that sort of said to everyone that she did not have a clue as to what was going on. When I think about it now I think she was just overwhelmed by the rest of us. If left on her own she would have been very quiet and maybe a loner but there was no way she could do that especially living with Sally. I have to give her a lot of credit for hanging in there and being an integral part of the group.
Woodie and Cathie |
When I think of Sally the only thing I can think of is laughter. Sally was from Montgomery, Alabama and had the biggest southern accent I had ever heard. There were very few days that went by that she did not say or do something that was totally stupid and funny. I have pictures of the night she decided everyone should stuff pillows under our clothes to see what we would look like being pregnant. How did Sally break her nose? As I remember she was breaking a couple of those "get expelled" rules by being at a party in a motel drinking bathtub purple passion.
Guess they also had beer since she was jumping on the bed trying to stick beer cans in the popcorn ceiling when she fell. I will have to ask her if that is the correct story. Pam said when I found Sally that she always imagined her growing up to be a true southern belle with beautiful clothes, gloves and drinking tea each afternoon. What did I say about us not changing much?
Sally |
Next to Pam and Paula. Both from the Los Angeles area but as different as night and day except when it came to academics where they both excelled. Paula was a dancer and gone a lot for practises. Of all of the eight of us she was the quietest and the only one who did not pledge a one of the local campus sororities. Also beautiful and very poised.
Pam wondered about my statement of what would we have all done without her in the last story. My first opinion of her was how sophisticated and worldly she was compared to little bumpkin me from Muskogee. Funny that I actually thought she would not like me and here we have been friends for fifty-one years. Pam traveled a lot and really hated flying and the rest of us were always amazed how she took all her clothes in a carry on bag. In the group she was the voice of reason, the one who took care of everyone else through thick and thin and never showed her disapproval when one of us did something stupid. I do not know if she ever broke a rule at Stephens but maybe now she might tell me.
Pam |
There is no way to describe Cathie in a paragraph. She was one of a kind and I feel very lucky to have had her for a roomie. Cathie was one of those people that everyone loved except parents who looked at her as a terrible influence. She in turn, never met anyone she didn't like and found good in everyone. There have been many times in my life when some situation would come up and I would actually ask myself "what would Cathie do?". The next few stories will begin to give you a look at how living with Cathie didn't change me but gave me the ability to be a lot more carefree and daring than I had been before.
So there is the cast of characters. Set these people in a town of 35,000 residents and 16,000 college students. This was an era when "nice" girls did not do a lot of things or admit to it. This was before student protests and the Feminist movement but during the race riots and the early stages of the Vietnam War. Sitting in the middle of Missouri with no television or computers or cell phones life was simple and a heck of a lot of fun.
Wednesday, January 18, 2017
The Start of the College Adventure
Cathie breaking the rules |
With my computer being offline for most of the month of December due to my own stupidity I had lots of time to think about those first few weeks of being at college. Usually I can sit down and write these stories in a couple of hours but this one has been started and erased many times over the last week. It really never dawned on me until the last couple of weeks how much that year at Stephens College caused a lot of changes in me. Maybe that is called growing up or at the very least, the beginning of that transition from childhood to being responsible for one's self.
Arriving at Stephens was actually quite devastating. I have always told people I am really quite shy which no one believes. It has always been an effort to meet new people and know what to do or say. But at the same time there has always been the desire to be liked and to have friends. Growing up and living in the same town for eighteen years made it easy for me to have friends just because I had known them all my life.
So, here I was in a group of eighteen hundred girls I did not know, who appeared to be so self-assured, had beautiful clothes and came from exciting places. To top it off I had Cathie for a room mate. There were many times in those first few weeks that if I would have had the courage to ask to change room mates I would have. As time passed there were many times the dorm mother asked if I wanted to room with someone else that I would laugh to myself and tell her that maybe I could help Cathie be a better person. Some how Cathie's constant antics, total disorganization and love of people drew me in. It got to the point where I was almost as good as she was at getting us into trouble.
Looking back now I have begun to realize that the eight of us living at the end of the hall together probably all wondered what we were doing there. Somehow we all managed to blend together in a little group we called "the Big Eight". Although we all made other friends at Stephens we relied on each other in the good and bad times and spent a lot of our free time together.
Pam, Sally, Woodie, Donna, Cathie, Marty Mo |
When classes started I realized that perhaps I had gotten in over my head. All the classes were fine except for the ones in Theater and Drama which was my intended major. Five minutes into the first class I was trying to fade into the chair dressed in my plaid wool jumper and weejuns. Everyone in that department was dressed in black tights and ponchos, had long flowing hair and wore sunglasses even at night. Sorry, I had gone through the "beatnik" phase when I was in the ninth grade and did not find it very appealing. Besides with the affected speech patterns everyone had I hardly understood anything they were saying.
Thankfully after the first week of classes you had a meeting with your advisor for him to see how your classes were going. I hope I did not sit there and cry since I was so unhappy but he did get the idea that I did not fit well in Drama department. By a stroke of luck he was the head of the Television, Radio and Film department and instantly switched all the drama classes to TV, Radio and Film. Have to say that I felt at home in that genre. The only class that was challenging was General American Speech. It was difficult to rid myself of the Okie accent that I did not know I had.
The student-advisor relationship at Stephens was pretty impressive. Mr. Wheeler, my advisor, not only kept check on you - to the extent that if you missed a class he called you on the phone to see what the reason was - but he also had a little get together with all his students once a month. Usually we were invited to his home for a cookout or dinner on a Sunday evening with his wife and three small children. I guess this gave him a chance to study us and see how we were doing. It gave me that little touch of home and family life that you tend to miss on your first adventure away from home.
Driving through Norman recently on a football game day I realized how much things have changed since I was in college. The second weekend I was in Columbia there was a University of Missouri football game. Stephens girls were not allowed to have or to drive cars. Going to the game meant walking to the stadium, which was quite a hike, with your girl friends or a date. Everyone dressed up to go to the game and if you were lucky enough to have a date you sported a huge mum in the black and yellow colors of the Missouri Tigers. I can remember walking to the game with a boy named Skip in my pleated skirt, sweater, knee socks and loafers with that flower pinned on my shoulder. After the game we had dinner and then went to a mixer (dance) at Stephens. It was the first college game I had ever been to and the whole day was so much fun.
Perhaps the most startling difference in going to college then and now was phones. Of course there were no cell phones and there were no phones in the dorm rooms. Each floor had a phone on both ends of the hall on every floor. Calls could come in from the outside or from the desk in the lobby of the dorm. It may sound awful but actually it was rather nice. If you decided going out with someone was not a good idea then you could happen not to be there or if your parents were calling to complain about money you didn't have to take the call. Everyone was good about leaving notes on your door stating what calls you had while you were out.
It may be that a lot of girls going off to college for the first time, away from parental supervision, would take the opportunity to become a little wilder than they were at home. In some ways perhaps we all did but basic lessons and morality instilled at home kept us pretty much in line.That is not to say we did not have a heck of a good time.
Did Cathie and I really exit a party through a bathroom window?
How did Sally break her nose on a date?
Was hitch-hiking to a banned night club the really smart thing to do?
How does one smuggle someone out of a hospital right after surgery for a pizza and beer?
Can a person drink 23 pony cans of Colt-45 and still walk?
If your father is the President of a bank did he really teach you to switch to a red pen when you are overdrawn?
Jefferson City is within the city limits of Columbia isn't it?
Why do I know so much Hebrew when I am not Jewish?
What would we have all done without Pam?
Lots of questions to figure out the answer to.
Wednesday, November 23, 2016
The First Week At Stephens
Just so no one feels bad and thinks all this comes from memories I will confess that some of it comes from little notes written on the Activity Calendar. I kept a pretty good record of events, activities and dates on the calendar that helps me remember a lot of this. It is interesting how a little note like "date with Skip" can cause you to remember a lot more.
As you read the stories always remember this was 1964. Things were a lot different then than they are now but in thinking back - not all bad.
After a very long and slightly calamitous day arriving at Stephens College sleep was a welcome relief. I can imagine that before my eyelids closed I tried to remember the names of our suite mates and all the other girls I had met in the last few hours. Did that girl, Cathie, sleeping in the nearby bed with a giant teddy bear really put her hair up in a rubber band on top of her head while I carefully put rollers in my hair? I really hated her the next morning when she popped out of bed and brushed her hair into a beautiful flip. Did she actually open her suitcase, grab an armload of clothes and stuff it in the dresser drawers? What did she think when I carefully unpacked with neatly folded clothes being placed in the dresser drawers in some sort of order?
We had arrived at Stephens at 2:30 in the afternoon and the 6:00 dinner hour came rather quickly. There was actually a twelve page booklet on the do's and don'ts of eating in the Dining Hall. The big requirement was that you had to wear hose and heels to dinner. There were tables that seated eight covered in crisp, white table cloths. One girl, designated by where you sat, was the Hostess who presided over the meal. Proper etiquette filled several pages of the book and I often wondered how many or if any girls struggled with any of the rules. The one great thing was that the food was outstanding and it became very evident through the year that one could easily gain weight eating three meals a day in the Dining Hall.
Interesting Dress Code Just To Eat
Even though we arrived on campus a week before classes started there was not a lot of free time. The second day consisted of a Hall Meeting for everyone in the dorm. At this meeting the Hall Mother, a very stern looking woman who looked to be ninety, laid out the rules for the dorm. There was to be "room check" every week to make sure we had good housekeeping practices, when leaving the dorm in the evening we had to sign out on a card stating where we were going and with whom and sign in upon our return. Of course, she would be standing there as we signed in and out to make sure we were properly dressed and sober upon arrival back. If you were late the door would be locked and you had to ring the doorbell for her to let you in. The rule was that you had to be in by 10:00 on the weekdays and 12:00 on Friday and Saturday. Any infraction would be swiftly dealt with by the Hall Council made up of girls living in the dorm.
For some reason I was picked as the South Hall representative on the Junior Class Steering Committee. I could not imagine then, nor to this day, how I was bestowed with this honor. Did I really appear as a sweet little goody-two-shoes? Would I really set an example of a Stephens Susie who was perfect in every way? It was obvious on that day that the Hall Mother felt I could do no wrong but she would be in for some big surprises as the year progressed. Do I really remember her as always wearing a black dress and matronly shoes?
Stephens College had an interesting way of looking at your college education in that your first couple of years should be spent exploring curriculum you were interested in. They required that a student take seventeen hours with a max of nineteen per semester. This was only eight hours of required courses and the rest of the classes devoted to art, dance, science etc. Girls were also required to have Saturday classes. Would you believe a physical education class in Equestrian Riding? Yes, Stephens had a stable out by their lake and girls did bring their horses to school.
That first week there were two days of Placement Tests? Never have figured that one out. Then there were welcoming shows, teas, registration for local, on-campus sororities, and a many other things we were required to attend. The important meeting of the week was with your advisor. I had put on my application that I wanted to major in Drama with an interest in Television Radio and Film Production. The Professor I got for an advisor was in charge of of the Television classes and he helped me pick classes in Drama to enroll in. Later I would find out how involved he was in my life at Stephens.
With all of the events of that week we still had time to explore the campus, realize that downtown Columbia was one block west from the campus and the University of Missouri started one block south of our dorm. There were four of five clubs in town that had bands on Thursday, Friday and Saturday nights so lots of chances to meet boys and dance. The clubs also offered free pitchers of beer to Stephens Susie's on Sunday afternoon. I found that interesting as legally no one at Stephens was old enough to drink and if you got caught drinking it was an automatic trip home the next day. Even more interesting was that these clubs were packed with Stephens girls and University of Missouri boys every Sunday.
I really feel that Mother missed the boat when she thought she was sending me to a girls college and that there would be no boys around. What a surprise to her if she had known that boys were on campus all the time. The very first Saturday night I was at Stephens the college had a mixer with boys invited to attend from the University of Missouri, Kemper Military Academy and Westminster College. It was surprise to me to find out that four boys from Muskogee were attending Westminster including Barry Bayless and John Cable from my class. That was a fun evening dancing to a local orchestra from Columbia using all our proper manners.
It was also the week that the group of eight girls at the west end of South Hall got to know each other and form a friendship that would last the year for some of us or a lifetime for some. There were Pam and Paula both from California, Woody from Memphis and Sally from Montgomery, Erin from Lansing, Mi and Mary from Hudson, Ohio and Cathie and I from Texas and Oklahoma. It was a very diverse group logistically and socially but we all managed to bond together quite well. The number eight worked out perfectly for the dinner table in our heels and hose, maybe without all the correct manners.
It was during that first week living with Cathie I came to realize that she was always late, never met a stranger, would do or say anything to anyone, would break any rule and filled our room with laughter morning, noon and night. There would be ups and downs through the year but the differences never lasted more than a few minutes. Besides she had the Kingmen's album with Louie, Louie on it so how could I stay mad at her.
The adventure was only just beginning.
Tuesday, November 15, 2016
Heading Off To College
The Summer of 64 seemed to pass very quickly at times and drag endlessly at others. It was a learning experience having my first real job and one that I did well enough at that my boss asked me to return the next summer. The knowledge that I was leaving everyone and everything I knew for the first time in eighteen years was a mixture of excitement and apprehension or perhaps sheer terror would be a more apt explanation.
Shortly after my acceptance letter came in the mail from Stephens College in Columbia, Missouri a book arrived in the mail that was a guideline for all students. There was also a letter that told me who my roommate was as the college picked those on the basis of the home visit done by the college representative done during my senior year. Mother got in contact with my new roommate's mother and took charge of decorating the room since we had visited the college during the summer. She immersed herself in "With In The Ivy" and gleamed over all the rules and regulations. The worst part was that she shopped for clothes for me. I tried to match the clothes she bought to my stacks of Seventeen magazines and wondered what style books she was looking at. Ah, but there was no arguing with Mother.
While Mother is planning my life at Stephens, Dad had a different idea. He thought it would be nice if I just stayed home and went to college at Northeastern State University. It was a short commute and he would buy me a Corvette or even a 1953 MGTD, which was my choice. It was tempting. Looking back now I realize that I probably knew what was going on with both parents but did not have the courage to just tell them they needed to stop the tug of war over me. Mother wanted the prestige of sending her daughter off to a private girl's college. Dad wanted his only daughter, his only buffer between he and my Mother, not to leave. Although Dad and I never talked about it we both knew what I had to do as neither of us was able to say no to Mother. It was a good thing I worked six days a week, spent as little time at home as possible and tried very hard not to think about any of it.
Back in 1964 there were a lot more rules for female students to live by. Stephens was no exception but perhaps due to the history of the college, a little more strict. In 1833 the Columbia Female College was established to provide a higher education for the girls in town. In 1857 the Columbia Female Academy was incorporated into the Baptist Female College. Finally in 1870 an endowment fund saw the name of the institution changed to Stephens College and in 1911 was reorganized to provide emphasis on the education of women in the first two years of college. By the mid-sixties it became a full four year college.
Stephens had hours that girls had to be in their dorms unlike the University of Missouri a few blocks away. Sunday through Thursday you had to be in by 10:00 and 12:00 on the weekends. You signed in and out of the dorm stating where you were going on the weekend nights and the dorm Mother was always there when you signed in. If you broke one of the three cardinal rules which were (1) No Drinking of alcoholic beverages (2) Do not enter a man's living quarters (3) Do not leave the county limits during the day or the city limits at night. Failure to heed these rules was an immediate plane ticket home. Sounded great to parents. I guess I figured those were going to be pretty simple to follow. Right?
Finally departure day arrived. Stephens had made plane reservations for all of the incoming freshmen. I was to fly from Tulsa to Kansas City to meet up with all the girls from the western part of the country. At the same time planes landed in St. Louis with all the girls from the east.
Chartered buses were to meet us at the airport and we would then be off to Columbia. I had never flown before, I was going off to college, I had luggage for the first time in my life all of which should have been very exciting. Upon landing in Kansas City all the girls were put into a large group while waiting for more planes to land.
A plane ticket from Tulsa to Kansas City was $40.25 in 1964 |
It was one of those times when all the insecurities and shyness seemed to overwhelmed me. I looked around at all the others girls giggling and laughing dressed in their Seventeen Magazine outfits with blonde hair and I wanted to hide in a corner and have a good cry. Mother had made me get my blonde hair dyed back to it's natural brown color so I looked wholesome. To make the day really perfect she had decided I should wear a brown dotted swiss dress with awful shoes that hurt my feet. Brown is not my color and had there been zombie movies at the time I would have been cast in an instance. But the worst was not over yet.
No one told me, nor was it mentioned in the book Mother studied so intently, that upon arrival at Stephens College the streets would be lined with boys from the University of Missouri. It was a tradition that the boys came by what seemed to be the hundreds to check out the new crop of Stephens Susie's as we were called. As I shuffled, yes shuffled, because my feet would no longer bend in those shoes I was wondering what I was doing in this place. I could only slide my feet along the pavement or pick them up and put them down flat much like a horse tromping down the street. Getting to my dorm room on the fourth floor I passed through more giggling girls finding out where everyone was from. I heard New York City, Los Angeles, Hawaii and on and on. How could I tell anyone I was from Muskogee, Oklahoma? Who ever heard of anyone from Muskogee? How many actually knew where Oklahoma was on the map? The bright spot had to be that Merle Haggard had not yet recorded that song as somehow it does not compare to 'New York, New York', 'San Fransisco Here I Come' or 'Chicago Is My Kind Of Town'.
South Hall at Stephens College |
The dorm room was stacked with boxes that had been shipped ahead of time. The rooms were set up so that two rooms shared a bathroom with a shower, sink and toilet. There was not much I could do until my roommate should up so I sort of hid in the room. Girls came in and out, introductions were made and names and hometowns swirled around me in a blur. Where could the mysterious roommate be? Surely she arrived in Kansas City and on the stream of buses about the same time I did. Maybe she wasn't coming? Maybe I could just hide in that room all by myself. Why did I ever let myself get talked into coming to this place?
About the time I was ready to break down and have a good cry a girl walks into the room. She said "Hi, I'm Cathie. You have to be my roomie". Every insecurity I ever had and maybe some new ones cut through me like a knife that moment she walked in the door. She had the most brilliant blue eyes I had ever seen, beautiful blonde hair and she filled any room with her presence. She would always remind me how my mouth dropped open when she appeared in the room. Needless to say it was a very rocky start for me at that moment to believe I would like her or that I could get along with her.
Cathie |
At least she was from Midland, Texas and not a glamorous place. That first day with Cathie was interesting to say the least especially when she went searching for one particular box that she had to find. Upon opening it, out came a very well worn four foot tall teddy bear named Jex. Jex slept with her every night. Even though I seriously wondered how out of eighteen hundred girls and seven boys attending Stephens College that fall I ended up with Cathie I would soon learn everyday was an adventure. I would also learn a lot about myself.
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