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Chapter 7: Charge It To My Home Phone

      "Hey Sweetie," I begin in a Sunday night call from the dorm payphone.  "What's up this week?" "My mother says you can't call collect anymore," Karen cries, frantic we might not be able to talk regularly. "She says it costs too much, but I really think she doesn’t like me dating a college guy." “Tell her I’m still only seventeen,” I laugh to hide dismay at being cut off from my emotional lifeline back home. “I'm just a year older than you.” “They want me to apply to Renssalaer where Dad went," she decries as the sobs stop, "but I’m going to Louisville to be with you!”      I was about to turn eighteen and was really two years older, but Karen Schindelar didn't have to be reminded in that moment of crisis. I also wasn't ready to tell her about my second thoughts on sports at the University of Louisville. We'd dated for a year and had been intimate for nearly that long, and we'd talked on the phone and wri...
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Postscript: Last Licks

      My year as a shortstop and criminal justice major at the University of Louisville became a false start for the post-secondary education that would define the rest of this life. In January of that first college year I discovered an intense dislike for 5am indoor baseball practice and left the team before the grass started to green.       Lost without a sport or a major, I visited Stan Redwood at Randolph-Macon College over spring break. At a meeting with football coach Ted Keller I was offered a general scholarship if I maintained good academic standing for the transfer. As the meeting ended Coach Keller said "Dave, there's a spot on the Yellow Jackets if you work hard." We shook hands and I refrained from belting out Tony Valenti's bastardized baseball practice chant.      A 40-yard sprint at my first Randy-Mac football practice was a dead heat with senior tailback Mike Woolfolk who was about to break the school's career rushing ma...

Chapter 12: Sat On The Can

     "Damn Bates, what a fucking travesty," consoles Stan Redwood from behind the wheel as we cruise by the empty Codrington Park basketball courts on a frigid New Year's night. "Yeah, first criminal justice sucks, then Buff gets run over by the mail truck, now I break up with Karen and don’t even know why,” I moan into a half empty bottle of Miller High Life as Stan pops in a cassette tape of the new Kansas album.  "You need to come down to Randy-Mac," counsels my high school friend also home for winter break. "Colloquy is going to be a blast."    "Winter ball starts next week," I retort as we drive by the Krauser's parking lot, also empty in the frigid wind, and the violin riffs into  Point of No Return . "Baseball's going to bite on a hard basketball court."      Stan had already saved my shy ass back in high school. I was one lonely jock when he plucked me from the neighborhood in his old Mercury just after getting ...

Chapter 11: Untouchable

      "Cunningham, get out there at short," calls Coach Zerilla after our bats come alive in the coolness of an early October evening at Paterson Field. "He's a polished fielder," shrugs starter Brett Goff plopping down beside me at the end of the dugout and inserting a pinch of snuff behind his lower lip. "We'll see what happens in the spring.”      Our last game of the fall season against Western Kentucky had become a blowout after four innings. In the bottom of the third the Dukes and Tony Valenti had smashed doubles off the red monster before sophomore outfielder Chris “Spider” Webb cracked a towering grand slam over the low brick wall in right. This game was my last chance to show what I could do in the field before winter break, and I was spending it on the bench.      I was about to turn eighteen and I hadn't told anyone I was thinking of leaving the team after the fall, but our starting shortstop seemed to sense my growing resentment ...

Chapter 10: J Edgar Hoover

      "Maybe it's better he didn't take me on that road trip," quips Steve Keller when I tell my teammate down the hall about the midnight antics of Coach Zerilla.  "Yeah, and good thing I got it down first try,” I mull as he slips an Earth Wind & Fire album onto a turntable tucked into a wooden bookshelf/desk in his tiny dorm room. “I’m not sure what I would have done if he cursed me out.” "Well I know I’m not going back out in the spring," Stevie continues as the guitar riff for Sun Goddess kicks in. "I need to ace Bio to have a shot at pre-dent."      In that fall of 1976 classes were in full steam with mid-term exams and papers due in early October. My report on Hoover and the FBI was turning up controversies I hadn’t imagined when I applied to criminal justice programs. Nepotism, persecution of political enemies, and homophobia among homosexuals were the headlines of the day for the agency I had imagined joining after college. What’s ...

Chapter 9: Red Monster

      "Up against the wall!" commands Coach Zerilla as we trudge off the bus at midnight after twin losses at Southern Illinois. "If you can't lay down a bunt in a close game, maybe you'll do it now." "Coach, it's been a long, hot day," groans Tony Valenti, his bow-legged gait heading stiffly toward the field house. "We'll be out here all night if we have to, Valenti," Coach Z decrees carrying a bag of balls and a lone wooden bat over to a switch box on one of the huge telephone poles surrounding Paterson Field. "No shower until you get one down!"       The old field at the edge of campus had been home to the U of L Cardinals since 1923. A large wooden grandstand around the infield had allowed it to also be the stadium for Louisville minor league and negro league teams until the rickety old structure was torn down in 1961. A distinctive feature of the field was a tall brick wall in left field reminiscent of the green wal...

Chapter 8: Brawl

      "All right Zelmo, let's see what you've got at the plate," announces Coach Zerilla in the middle of a close second game of a hot double-header at Southern Illinois University. "Thanks," I mutter, squinting into the glaring afternoon sun while fumbling for a helmet at the mouth of the sunken concrete dugout seemingly placed to blind the visiting team. “He’s going to come at you with the curve so stay in there until it drops into the strike zone,” Z advises from behind his Ray-Bans.      My first at-bat of the fall season was a reward for a stolen base and run scored in the first game. We’d lost 2-1, but Coach Z’s use of a designated runner after a walk by Duke Schneider had paid off when Duke Shumate knocked me in from second on a long single to right center.       Our practices after being sent home early were indeed more focused, if less fun. It was a sober four-and-a-half hour bus ride to Carbondale for the noon first game. By th...