By Dave Shiflett on 8.30.02 @ 12:25AM
Boston is a great town, notwithstanding the academically permissive climate of its fabled colleges .
It was off to Boston this week. The elder son, whom we dropped
off at the Berklee College of Music about this time last year, is
re-nesting (for a bit). His story is instructive; he has a perfect
grade point average and concluded the program was not nearly as
demanding as it should be. His complaint is fairly common; the
curriculum seems to have been adjusted downward so as not to spook
slackers. Harvard is apparently not the only Boston school where
grade inflation undermines respect among those who know it
best.
One wonders if the same thing is happening in the trade schools,
which of course would be far more serious. It is one thing for a
Harvard history grad not to know in which century Ted Kennedy
drowned his date, or for a Berklee jazzbo to run an errant
scale.
It is quite another for an auto mechanic to be poorly trained in
his discipline. That is especially on one's mind while breaking the
sound barrier on the New Jersey Turnpike with tractor-trailers at
either side. A poorly-tightened nut or two could result in fiery
disintegration. Similar thoughts come to mind when visiting the
surgeon, especially in light of stories of patients who enter the
hospital for a nose job and leave minus a leg. One assumes that the
threat of lawsuits keeps things a bit tighter in the vital
institutions, and for this we can, in part at least, thank the
trial lawyers.
Meanwhile, Boston is a great town, especially for Southern
rustics like myself. When we travel to New York we sometimes wish
we had a guide to navigate the canyons of Manhattan. With the sun
often blocked we easily lose our sense of direction and the
vertical nature of the city is at war with our innate love of
sprawl.
Boston is no problem. It has an open feel to it. There are no
canyons to speak of, and several gentle hills from which to take in
impressive city vistas. Beacon Hill offers one such view. If you
want to go to the top of the Prudential Building you can scan past
the land, out to where the ocean creatures and watermen live.
Boston is also a friendly place, at least in the areas we
strolled through (due to time limitations we skipped the sections
where shootings are most common). This may be the result of a
massive student population. Many students, who are still living on
the dole, have yet to have their personalities permanently seared
by mortgages, unruly children, and tyrannical bosses. There were
some grumbles about the impending war with Iraq, which one would
expect from the population from which soldiers are drawn (there
seems to be a fear that Congress will re-institute the draft).
Otherwise, the student life appears to retain its carefree status,
perhaps even more so in these times of lessened academic
expectations.
It was strange for those of us who drank legally while in school
to encounter the fierce bias against under-21 drinkers. The boy (20
years old) and I went into a bar named after noted barfly Charles
Bukowski, yet the barman would not serve him so much as a glass of
water. Indeed, he wasn't allowed to stay in the building. The young
are as ever quite adaptive, and where the fake ID fails home
brewing takes up the slack. We enjoyed a nice Brown Ale and Wheat
Beer cooked up on the boy's stove, and dreamed of more reasonable
days.
Boston seems to be a fairly religious town, with lots of people
passing in and out of the beautiful churches while others expressed
their faith in other forums. A growing number of city bartenders
were striking back at the Boston Beer Company (makers of Sam Adams)
for sponsoring the contest that sent two Virginians into St.
Patrick's in New York for a highly publicized bonk session. Their
complaint: Sam Adams was kicking their church while it was down, as
one protester put it.
Meanwhile, a thunderously loud gospel concert shook the city's
municipal center -- full-strength black Baptist gospel, as in "Show
yourself Satan and we will kick your sorry ass!" In Cambridge, a
young woman sang songs in front of the Unitarian Church, where
Satan would likely be told he didn't exist before being hugged
within an inch of his life. As we strolled through the North End we
passed by a half-opened door on which hung a "Members Only" sign.
Inside sat a collection of old chatting beneath a picture of the
Pope. One assumes the buggery crises came up sometime that evening,
and my unsolicited advice to those gents would have been to start
tossing out the bums, starting with Cardinal Law, who ran a
longtime protection racket for child-molesters. You've got to
figure that somebody has something on that guy.
But it was too nice an evening for heavy topics. We were looking
for dinner, and this happened to be the Feast of St. Anthony. North
End streets were thick with garlic fog and also beautiful women,
carousing Romeos, and moist-eyed old men drinking wine at sidewalk
tables. It is hard to believe that not too long ago the Italians
were invading Ethiopia. What the hell got into them? Afterward we
picked up a few delights at Mike's Pastries, including an
éclair the size of a mortar round. It was something of a
surprise to wake up the next morning.
Boston wouldn't be the worst place to be buried, as it happens.
Some of its graveyards are quite impressive, both in their client
lists and because they are so dark, even in the middle of the day.
Their shadows are full of slouch-shouldered gravestones black with
age; walking past one, we peered through the iron fence to behold
the marker for old Sam Adams himself. One wonders what he might
think of his namesake brewery's problems with his home town's
bartenders. Probably not much. Sam was not the biggest fan of
Popery. Lord knows what he would have made of the Muslims. Sausage,
perhaps.
We even saw an angel. The sighting was in Harvard Square, where
a fellow dressed in a white robe, and in white face, mounted a
white pedestal and assumed the unmoving appearance of a marble
statue. Unmoving, that is, until passersby dropped coins into his
tip vase, at which time he would acknowledge them by a subtle shift
of position. The performance was quite effective in producing a
sense of the supernatural, and so the mere coin-tossers were
spirited aside by yours truly, who held up a bill and said "Here's
a twenty. Let's see you flap those wings." Which he did, apparently
with the help of fishing line.
Of course it wasn't really a twenty but merely a one. And why
not? How many chances does one get to stiff an angel? That alone
was worth the trip. The rest was gravy.
topics:
Trade, Law, Iraq