Tag Archives: Harvard

My Bus Ride to… More Bus Ride Part Whatever, Here’s The End

15 Nov

from June 9, 2008

I was walking through a light rain to a burger joint I had never been to before. Really, that’s a metaphor for my life if I ever heard one. (You figure it out.) I was just a little disappointed that I wasn’t able to buy a Yale mug to match my Harvard mug. Who would ever believe that I almost sort of saw those schools without mugs? Now the Harvard mug would have no mug to trash talk up in my cupboard during the annual Harvard/Yale football game.

We crossed the street and my keen eye spotted a New Haven Welcome! place that had Yale mugs in the window. My keen eye even recognized that it was open. My dull brain didn’t get the memo and I kept walking. It was now taking orders from my stomach, which said “to Hell with the keen eyes, I want a burger.” Well Liz, ever the brains of the operation, put two and two together, managed to get four, and we went into the store and purchased Yale mugs. In all honesty, I think Harvard has the better mugs.

Harvard may have the mug advantage, but Yale has the Indiana Jones advantage.
Harvard may have had the advantage of being open when we were there, but Yale has the normal toilet and toilet paper advantage.
Harvard was where we had a hard time finding a candy bar, and Yale has the burger joint advantage.

Harvard 0, Yale 3.

I would have walked a mile through a hailstorm to avoid getting on the bus, so a couple of blocks in a small drizzle to Louie’s Lunch was nothing. After taking a wide detour around a vicious dog we were there.

Louie’s Lunch is what you might get if you took a hundred-year old tavern and converted it to serving burgers and pie. It is old and wooden and looks like it was around when John Smith first took Pocahontas to a cheap motel and became the first guy to write “John Smith” in a hotel register in Jamestown. They seem to be famous for their burgers.

A Louie’s Lunch burger is made right in front of you. They take ground meat (beef, I assume) and whack it into patties. They then chop up onions and whack it into the beef and mix it all up. Don’t like onions? You may not have a choice. It goes sideways into some sort of burger cage and the cage is put, still sideways, into some kind of countertop brass thing that seems as old as the rest of the place and may at one time have been used to heat horseshoes. While that’s going on, a couple of plain and ordinary pieces of white bread are prepared. One has semi-melted “cheese” spread on it while the other has a piece of lettuce dropped on it. The burgers come out of the horseshoe thing and put on the bread, and the whole thing is wrapped up in wax paper.

All four of us there, meaning that the kids were alone on the bus with the driver, and let him put up with them for awhile. I’d had enough.

While the burgers were working we also decided on four cans of Pepsi and pie, which was more of a production than you might expect. First of all, Maria asked a million and one questions, a few of them relevant and a couple of them germane. (I admit I didn’t help when, after the old guy claimed to have the second best apple pie I just had to know who had the first.) The guys behind the counter were an old guy and a young guy and they had clearly polished the act over the years. The old guy was the long-winded story-teller and the young guy rolled his eyes and smirked at the proper points. The young guy was the (so he claimed) grandson of the original Louie. The old guy was just some guy who worked there. Maria used to work at Nathan’s in Coney Island and somehow the hot dog place got mentioned. I made the mistake of saying “You’ve got a Nathan’s original right there” and pointed down at Maria, and the yakitty yak yak was on. I learned a lot about Maria’s days as a corn girl and came to the uncomfortable realization that she may have served me some hot dogs when I was young.

We were seated at what would have been the bar in the old days and was now the counter. From right to left, it went Maria, Ray, me, and Liz.

While Maria was talking she got suckered, or should I say she suckered herself, into a dice game. If Maria were in the middle of a stickup she’d be the one to call back the burglars to tell them that they forgot to take her purse. “What’s the matter? Isn’t my purse good enough? Don’t ignore me, I’m not like you people.”

For a couple of bucks (“or as much as you want to bet”) you get to roll six dice out of a Styrofoam cup. If they all match you win whatever the jackpot was at that moment. Neither of the guys was too sure what the jackpot was but they were positive it was big.

Maria put down two dollars and rolled. Two dice rolled right off the counter, where the old guy claimed it woke up the cat but I think that was just folksy bullshit. It didn’t matter since the dice on the counter didn’t match but they kindly gave her a re-roll, which she also lost. I can’t for the life of me explain why but she was going to bet again when we all just told her to stop.

The guys also ran some bullshit around the rest of us, asking Ray if he was with Maria and if Liz and I were married.

I am ashamed to say that I had no glib response for that one.

I still don’t.

I should have.

Well, by then my waders were covered up to the thighs after slogging through so much crap that we took the bags and walked back, happily, to the bus. In fact we were so happy to be out of Louie’s Lunch, I place I love but cannot stand, that it took us almost two whole blocks to realize that we never got the soda.

Ray and I walked back, mostly because we still had a long bus ride ahead of us and we would be thirsty, but also because there was a little part of us that just couldn’t stand to get back on the bus. The kids were on it, and I had spent the better part of six months sitting across the two front seats that day.

We went back in and this time the vicious dog was gone so I swaggered back in and announced “you forgot our sodas!” The old guy looked confused and told us that “the other guy must have taken the wrong bag.” I saw the other guy. He ordered one burger and nothing else and took the right bag. The wiseguy behind the counter never bagged any sodas. He figured we’d be on the bus and back in New York before we realized that he gypped us out of two sodas and would have been spending our $4 on God-knows-what and laughing all the while. Well he didn’t fool me and I got the sodas. I’m a New Yorker. I’m more afraid of Bommarito than I am of some New Haven burger-flipper.

We got. Back. On the bus. Again. And since it was humid I told the driver to put on the air. (“You got it!” I didn’t rate a “baby.” It had something to do with my biological plumbing.) We had our food, the kids had their food, no one was in danger of eating a student, and we were off to Brooklyn.

The burgers were very, very good.

We drove through the rain and darkness and some movie played on the DVD but when it ended we just left it dark. Counting colleges had turned into counting billboards. The driver took the long way home, and didn’t I just appreciate that? I sat in the front passenger side seat with, alternately, my legs over the barrier or my upper body hanging over the barrier. Either way, if Driver Ray stopped short I was through the front window and home faster than the rest. I have no conscious memory of what we talked about. We laughed the way people do when they’re very tired and everything seems funny, even the imminent end of the world and cannibalism.

We got back to Lafayette. I found that I had aged a month and Liz missed about fifty calls from her father, which made her happy. Ray left to go home and start packing his things because he’s moving, and Maria felt sick and Liz drove her home.

The kids were gone, Liz was no longer on my left, and I went home to a familiar bed and slept.

The next Saturday we took the kids to Great Adventure and had a blast, despite two kids passing out and Liz and I having to yell at some kids who, intelligently, started a food fight. My personal high point came when I was sure that I had lost my hat but I had actually been sitting on it the entire time.

Next week is a trip to Washington and I am not on that one. This will be the first weekend in three weeks I haven’t spent with Liz, and draw your own conclusions. I have been replaced by some Tom guy. A word to the Washington-bound: You will not get a single funny blog out of that trip, and if you come back and tell me that you had more fun with Tom than you did with me, I will know that you are only trying to make me jealous.

My Bus Ride to… More Bus Ride Part Four or Five: The Ride Just Won’t End!

15 Nov

from June 8, 2008

We were on the bus for the umpteenth hour and we were headed back to New York, with just one more school to see- Yale. Yale University late Saturday night after graduation was sure to be jumping, so I was looking forward to seeing the outside of yet another closed school, and a two hour ride was right up my alley.

The remaining meals, I mean kids, were subdued. We only had to yell “shut up!’ two or three times. It was rainy and dark and we were tired. Maria and Ray had fallen asleep across the aisle from each other to cleverly make it look like there was nothing between them and I put The Perfect Storm on the DVD player.

The Perfect Storm is the true story of some New England fisherman who set out in their boat to fish the dangerous Reef of Doom, home to the tastiest swordfish this side of Atlantis. You see, the captain, played by George Clooney had a streak of bad luck. Despite being George Clooney and all the charisma that entails, he had not caught a single fish all season. In fact, the closest he came to a fish was when he saw the menu at Red Lobster. (He ordered the shrimp.) Well, Clooney and his men set sail for the farthest point on their map. Had they gone even one inch further they would have sailed right off the edge of the world. (These were old-school sailors. No fancy globes for them! Copernicus be damned.  He wasn’t a fisherman.) So after taking a long and excruciating tour of  coastal colleges they finally arrived and wouldn’t you know it? Some other guys got there first and caught all the fish. “You should have been here yesterday!” So they turned around and sailed straight into not one but three storms. Perfect! Long story short, they all died.

That was the peppy and upbeat film I put on the DVD player. Just the right thing to watch on a dark and rainy day- guys dying in a storm. But at least they didn’t resort to cannibalism- there were no students on board. Come to think of it, there were no women on board either but I won’t go there, not even to make my “salty seamen” joke.

Well, my monitor went out. Clooney looked all squiggly and Mark Wahlberg developed a strange case of facial blurriness. So I moved across the aisle (to my left) and sat next to Liz.

The lights were low. Everyone around us was asleep. The driver turned around and gave me a wink. It wasn’t long at all until, finally, Liz and I…..

… watched the movie.

What? What did you expect?

The rain had let up when we arrived in New Haven Connecticut, proud home of Yale University. It was, I think, somewhere between six-thirty and one hundred o’clock. The plan was to walk around Yale and go to a burger place that Maria had heard about for dinner. Then home. “Home,” ah yes, the mythical “Home.” Seems to me that I had been home once, long before leaving on this Odyssey. And much like Odysseus of myth, I already suspected that my family had given up on me and my friends despaired of ever seeing me again. (OK, my family gave up on me years ago and my friends already figure they’ll never see me again, so this isn’t much of a stretch. But its a nice literary touch and how about the use of the phrase “despaired of ever seeing me again”? I am an English teacher.)

Many of the kids had had it already. Probably 2/3 of them decided that they didn’t give a damn about Yale and just wanted to get home instead of walking around in the rain with us kooks. They were the smart ones and they stayed in the bus and prayed they would get home someday.

Well, New Haven seems like a nice quiet college town, at least the part we saw. It is a nice and affluent town, and even the homeless in the park were a little less shabby than the New York bums. Compared to the Chicago homeless, these guys were positively angelic. (See my old Chicago blogs for more on the Chicago homeless. Shameless plug!)

Well, the driver didn’t really know where to stop. (“What do you think, baby? That the entrance over there? I’ll find a place to park over there, baby.” I swear, if he hit on Liz one more time his fly would have melted.) We ended up a couple of blocks ahead of the school and walked through the park, where we were not accosted by the polite homeless and came to a church which was not part of Yale but we had to go into anyway. Liz has to visit churches, especially old and historic ones, which I must admit is cool, so I went in too with a few of the kids.

Something was going on in the church. People were filling in and were being greeted at the door. It may have been a wedding or a confirmation of perhaps Jesus had just risen. What did I know? I’m Jewish. But I went in anyway because it was a cool looking old church and Liz had gone in and maybe I’d have to get her out if there was trouble. Maria stayed outside, partially because she was asking random passersby where to find the burger place but mainly because she might have spontaneously combust if she set foot on holy ground.

Turns out it was a concert of some sort and we exited after a couple of uncomfortable minutes where I was sure that at any minute someone would walk up to me and explain the concept of tithing.

We crossed the street and walked down the block to find the entrance to the Yale campus. We found it, and we also found a nice old lady headed to the concert who gave us directions and also told us that Yale was where they filmed the Marshall College parts of Indiana Jones and The Kingdom of The Crystal Skull. (Yale therefore earned us two college points, bringing the total college tally to around 986 at that point.) And yes Marc, there is a new Indiana Jones movie.

YES! I WANT TO GO TO YALE WHEN I GROW UP! Remember when Indy and Mutt (still hate that name) motorcycle through the library? That was actually filmed in the dining hall. We walked right into a wide open dorm (I hope the Department of Homeland Security is reading this, and they probably are.) and saw the most magnificent architecture I ever saw in a foyer. It was better than that painting of the dogs playing poker, it was so cool. I also took the opportunity to find the Yale bathrooms, which were much nicer, bigger, and had better toilet paper than Harvard. Take that Philadelphia- I mean Harvard! For those of you keeping score, I have now taken a dump in two Ivy League schools, both in the same day. Why couldn’t we have stopped in Princeton so I could get the Northeastern Trifecta?

We then went to the dining hall, which was locked. We tried every door and they were all locked, until a kid tried the door all the way on the end and it was open. I think he may have picked the lock in hopes of currying some favor so we wouldn’t eat him. Well, in we went and there we were, right were Harrison Ford acted it up. So cool! I had just seen the movie a few days ago and the Raiders theme was still echoing in my head (it didn’t help that I had spent the past month on the bus) as I looked around and saw the kids rearranging the tables. I swear that is true! They sat down and immediately began to move around the plates and settings. I yelled at them to get up and saw Maria and some kids over at the soda machine helping themselves to drinks. I was sure we were going to get thrown out- at any time I expected someone to walk in and demand to know what we were doing there. But I was more afraid of what Liz would do to Maria if she got us banned from Yale so we got the kids out of there. And on the way out they were playing with the computers behind the register and had to be chased out of there too.

We walked around the campus in the rain and some of the smarter kids found a fountain and started splashing, like the rain wasn’t making us wet enough. They also stuck sticks and an umbrella in the fountain. Nice.

And that was Yale.

We walked to the bus in the rain, me without hat or umbrella, Maria in some kid’s sweater that she had commandeered, and Liz in a wet t-shirt. I’m a good boy. I only looked at her from the neck up. She teaches Sunday school.

We asked the kids on the bus if they were hungry and they all got nervous, but when we told then that we’d be walking to a restaurant they calmed down and a few came with us, the rest stayed on the bus. We were getting the food to go so we could eat it, yes, on the bus.

To Be Concluded in Part Last: Louie’s Lunch, gambling, and I get loopier.
CONCLUSION HERE