Mar 15, 2019

Opportunity Knocks

 Nick had been in the lab just long enough to get into a groove when Goody asked him if he had about 10 to 15 minutes. They proceed to his office and Goody shuts the door.

"I didn't do it." Nick starts.

"Hey as long as no one can prove it you're all set."

"Well that was too easy."

Goody just smirks and looks for some papers. "So...how's your old dad these days?"

"Last I saw he's older than ever."

That earns a laugh. "Sometimes I miss it over there. Has he mentioned any prospects?"

"Nothing specific but entry level could open up at any time, seems a lot of changes are on the horizon, expansion...I hear this and that but never sure."

"From what I understand they are taking on bigger and better things soon, and I'm not sure you'd just be limited to entry level."

"Well I don't know -"

"Nick I just got an update from the registrar, if you hold on you'll graduate above a three-nine. That's in the top 2 or 3 of the ET division and my best by a head. Congratulations."

"Wow, thanks, that sounds like good news."

"And remember you haven't slacked at all, full electives including an extra programming language. All that will open doors."

"I'm not very good with doors sometimes."

"So I’ve noticed...alright, here's what I know...now, remember there's a lot in play here, but we are looking at a few positions here at the campus that you'd be considered for, in the upcoming months."

"Oh."

"Yeah, we'd love to have you around. Now remember this is confidential."

Nick sits up in his chair, "Of course."

"OK, well, Brian, (as he points toward the lab tech’s lair) may be moving on soon, he has yet to put in official notice but was kind enough to let us know. It's nearly full-time at 36 hours a week, you'd be full staff, benefits, and report officially to Sue Richards, of course, you know, she's not so concerned about day to day stuff in the lab, so you'd coordinate with me."

"Right...wow."

"Hey, and I think you know about what that entails, maintaining the scopes and the CPU lab computers, some questions from students."

"Poor Brian."

"Yeah...well, he does get a little frustrated at times, but I think - again, between you and me and the doorpost - his temperament is probably better suited for, you know, less interaction and more concentration."

"A cave dweller."

(Chuckles) "yeah maybe, but I think with your easy going nature it should be a good experience all around, you seem to have a good sense of boundaries. It is OK to say 'no' sometimes, since that role is primarily to maintain equipment and not assist students with their assignments."

"That sounds about right."

"Alright, well, in addition to that....as you know, the enrollment has been growing and expected to grow, with estimates that the fall will see at least 5% overall increase over this past year."

"Wow again."

"Yeah, it's terrific. And so you've also been put on a list of those to consider for adjunct instructors, you know, for the entry level classes. These would be mainly evening courses, and should you also take the lab tech position then we would adjust your hours accordingly -"

"That makes sense."

"So what do you think about teaching?"

"Well, had never thought about it. I've had some great examples though."

"Flattery, Nick...."

Nick grins. "Well, you too of course, Goody."

Goody just shakes his head. "Well, I think that covers about everything I'm aware of. Any questions? Oh, have you sent out many resumes?"

"What's a resume?"

"Now come on -"

"I did sign up for the placement and had her, um-"

"Barb?"

"Yeah, Barb, I sat with her and looked over the (jazz hands) ol' rez and then sent out a few to cold companies, but...well,  that was last quarter, I never heard anything back. It just doesn't feel...well, like I am in a huge hurry, that I need to jump in right away. I'm still at RadShack -"

"Oh that's right, I'd forgotten. Is Emmett still running those?"

"Lord help us he is."

This gives him a hearty laugh. "Oh my he's a character...do you get along?"

"Almost too well, he wants to make me a manger somewhere."

"Well, I'm impressed, that would be decent experience on the leadership side of things."

"I try not to think about Bain. He's always got something up a sleeve or two."

"Alright, well think things over and you know where to find me, I'm taking some days off here and there but leave a message."

"So the lab tech, when could that start?

"Well, of course that kind of depends on Brian but we would want to have someone in place by the first of August to get ready for fall. OH, and another perk with that, or at least I see it, you might too, is that there will be down times here and there, when everything is set and working as it should, and, maybe, not that much going on, then you can just, you know, play games or work on pet projects, you know, have access to the equipment that's not being used elsewhere."

"Cool. Sounds about right. I appreciate all this, sir."

Goody nods, "Well you've earned it and we know you'll make the right decision," with that wry grin.

They shake hands and he heads back to lab.


Mar 14, 2019

Two's The Clinch

Nick makes his way up the stairs to the English department with his best draft in hand, printed on dot matrix in some kind of Serif font. In earlier days he would venture over to the Apple II lab in the library, but eventually made the tech building's PC lab his regular haunt once Steve Collins had gotten him familiar with the DOS world. It was mostly the PS/2 Models 25 and 30, slower than his beast at home but with hard drives full of games that fit many times on a floppy.

There's no one at the reception desk so he looks around, winds back through a hallway and finds Noreen slumped over a desk in the corner somewhere beneath a blond mop. She looks up at him and cocks her head sideways. She gets up and does a stiff-legged shuffle of sorts, while making a dimple face, proceeds past him and grabs his paper. He follows her to a small conference room with windows. She points at the further chair and grunts. He hesitates, so she grunts a bit louder. He complies.

She plops in the other chair then shuffles through the pages, making a hom-hom-hom noise and bobbing her head back and forth. She then sets them back down and pulls her hair back, then lets it fall, then proceeds to read the text while whispering. At random intervals there's a surprised AWWWW or gasped OH or even a tsk-tsk-tsk. All this time her head has lowered to where her hair is completely covering the pages.

"You're getting hair on my printout," he observes.

She looks up for a second then waves a finger, making sci fi-alien-like sounds. Flips the page. Then there's this almost ghastly evil grin emerging from beneath the hair, more clicky-alien sounds and her head shakes. She pulls a magnifying glass out of a front pocket and appears to be looking at a pixel-level.

At some point she sits up, head to one side, wide eyed, draws a breath, and makes a mark.

In her normal voice, "Are you familiar with an Oxford comma?"

"Never been to Oxford."

"Look it up."

And then, she turns sideways, crosses her legs and puts the remaining pages on her lap, and twiddles her famous red pen.

"Are you even reading that?"

She leans toward him, extends her index finger upward just a few inches away from his face, "That's ONE. Two's the clinch." And then continues as she had.

After a page or two she leans an elbow on the table and continues on, marks something, then goes into what can only be described as mumbled ohh no mister bill bit from SNL.

Eventually she turns towards him, "OK, now granted I'm no expert on the subject matter -"

"You mean programming VCRs?"

She pauses, leans in, and motions him to lean a bit closer. She makes a number two with her outstretched hand, then quickly uses them to grab his nose.

In an understandably nasal voice, he queries, "Are we in a conflict of interest yet?"

She lets go. "The only thing you need to worry about in life is THIS," grins maniacally, raises one brow, and waves the red pen for a few seconds, squares herself in the chair and continues. "Is there enough detail in this section here, regarding your process for building -wait, how about, testing the prototype?"

"There's some things I could add."

"Such as?"

"Well, there were some additional steps I could piece together, I suppose they are relevant."

"See that you do." and then writes some notes in the margins.

She brings a foot onto her chair, rests the right arm with the right hand with the pen on one knee and keeps twirling, then makes wide eyes, snarls, sticks her tongue out to one side, and sneezes into her elbow.

"Gesundheit!" Nick offers.

She just gives a cold stare while resuming her gaze at the pages, which are now fewer to go.

Nick really wishes he had to fart at this point, but no such luck. Even a peeper would do. He tries reaching for the magnifying glass but gets met by the red pen being held at him as a knife, she starts to growl and snarl. He slowly withdraws. There's no winning here. His next move would just be to tap fingers or hambone, forget it.

He turns and looks out the window behind him. It was strange, after all those years growing up and coming to the campus while on a drive or to take trail walks, to have this viewpoint.

She draws a deep breath and he turns back her way, and she seems to be just now staring down at the paper as if to set it on fire by will.

"Find anything good?"

Noreen just shakes her head and keeps shaking it for a good minute or so. He can hear her foot bobbing beneath the table.

He gets up to stretch his legs.

"Sit." she commands.

He looks her way, she stares him down and gradually rises with a menacing look. He shrugs and sits.

Eventually she turns over the last paper and writes some notes, puts the pages back in order, shuffles them on the desktop, and stands up. She slowly walks over to him and offers her hand. She pulls to get him to his feet, leans in and lightly pecks his cheek, whispers "Very nice work," then slaps the pages against his chest, and walks away, slowly, slouching, as a weary, defeated child.

Nick takes one more look out the window, sighs, and heads out.

*****

It's a work-free Thursday evening ahead at home. He eats supper downstairs for once and mentions the paper review, tries to describe her antics, how she got the whole lab into a Monty Python frenzy, and Irene was able to get hints that they talk sometime. 

"She sounds interesting, honey, you just may have met your match this time," she offers with a grin. 

The comments written on his draft were purely clinical, as expected, but not without merit. In fact, he has to think he would have asked her to take a look even if it weren't officially arranged. He had usually had his mom proof things up through high school but not so much after that, she said it was just too technical or above her pay grade. Ned would breeze through and pick out the technical but wouldn’t evaluate the grammar at all.

So he powers up his Model 50, finds the floppy with the file and goes at it.

Later on, after diddidahs on the big fancy radio and TNG he slips downstairs to tape Flying Circus off the public TV out of Decatur, it's time to up the Python game. Tonight it happens to be the Whickers' Island where they all act like a nasally-voiced, hypnotically droning interviewer named Whicker. This spawns an irresistible plot. 

You ain't seen nuthin' yet, lady.


Mar 13, 2019

Continuous Wave

It's Friday night. Nick maneuvered the weekend off of work to get some space. Plan is to sleep in and and ease into it.  Tonight, however, he's at the workbench, which now includes a PS/2 Model 50 that Ned had snagged for a bargain from the plant back around Christmas, not really calling it a Christmas present but to Nick it was the best thing since that year he got the boombox.

The workbench is big and solid, pretty much built-in-place over a weekend, with very sturdy shelving. It's construction back in junior high was almost prophetic, it had been a place of trial, error, plotting, frustration, and triumph, sometimes even in the same day. Before the IBM had gotten a place in the side, the middle had gotten his granddad's prize possession, an Icom IC-745 transceiver for the high-frequency (shortwave) bands, that his household had inherited long before it seemed right. Taking possession of an icon never seems right, if it can't be where it was then it should be enshrined in a museum.

Paps had kept it beneath a dust cover, so Nick does as well. Since he's not licensed, although considering it, he doesn't keep a mic hooked up or anything else, just uses for receive with a thin wire he had strung through a window and over some trees with the help of a slingshot. He has been amazed at how well it does with just that wire, since his only previous access to shortwave were via multiband desktop dial-tune radios. Thanks to the Icom manual he's been able to figure out the sidebands and even zero in on the CW (Morse Code) signals here and there.

There was something about the code, simply put, he had the need to de-code it. Perhaps this was the same impetus for pursuing the RTTY project, to get to the bottom of something. Who was sending the signal, and what were they saying? Only one way to find out.

Nick had listened to some of the training tapes over the past summer, and could copy the slowest speed and maybe a little faster. More and more he enjoys listening to the CW practice transmissions that came from back east at 9 o'clock weeknights. After that they went into the bulletins at a faster speed, but at that point it was time for Star Trek TNG at 10.

In some of Pap's old books he learned a bit about operating procedures, Q-signals and such, evidently he had done some real traffic handling. Pap was a natural having served in Signal Corps during two wars, and Ned had thought at one point he trained traffic handlers in the amateur service, maybe even for the armed forces auxiliary, or along those lines

So, Nick was hoping to listen to the higher code speeds and go from there. He had found the magazines at the campus library that gave the schedules and frequencies for the practice transmissions, not broadcasts. Amateur frequencies are meant for two-way communication, but if you make an announcement (QST) then it's not a broadcast. In the warmer months he could usually hear the first part of the 9pm transmission on the 14 MHz (20 meter) band, then in winter he had to try the 7 MHz and sometimes 3.5 MHz, but he believes he'd need a longer antenna wire for lower bands.

He had noticed in the training books that you end a CW conversation with '73' and then 'SK', for 'silent key'. This is also the term they use in the magazines to honor hams who have passed on. Nick was still coming to terms with Paps being an SK. His visitation ran two nights and was swarmed, no telling how many brass-pounders he'd shaken hands with, mixed in with guys from the service.

For now, he'll be glad to solder up a home version of his RTTY circuit and feed it into his desktop PC. He's got ready access to the parts plus employee discount. He's seen hints that that there are also transmissions for ASCII and something called AMTOR, which might be a good challenge for his new found C skills.

Sometimes the best way to cushion the loss of someone is to get inside their world, after a time.


Mar 12, 2019

SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM

The lab is pretty much full from a class that ended an hour ago, the usual bantering and someone's radio playing softly, the lab tech, Brian, and one of the MET (mechanical) students are throwing a ball through the open doors of his hallway-shaped office.

Nick is just using the space to make some notes for his C language course, and really wishing he could have taken it sooner to use with the RTTY project, but electives have to fit where they fit. The consolation prize was BASIC on an IBM AT that was not dead yet, even had a neato batch file to shut it down gracefully and park the drive heads. He was about to pack up and head over to the PC lab when, who else, the plucky blond in his life strolls in.

"Hey fellas, how's those papers coming?”

The expected responses, haven't started, dog ate it, the computer crashed.

"Yeah yeah. Have you seen Al around? I needed to drop this off."

Brian the lab tech pipes up, "You can leave it with me or, better yet with the receptionist."

"OH up front, with the dean?"

"Yeah they'll get it to him."

"Cool, good to know, thanks."

She steps over to Nick's desk.

"Hear any good jazz lately?"

"Yeah but it didn't remind me of anyone."

This draws a scowl, and her flawless Brit accent,"I blow my nose at you, you silly English knnnniggett! Your mother was a shrew and your father smelled of elderberries! " then the raspberry while she tapps her head.

Then a male voice chimes in, "Go and boil your bottoms, you sons of a pig-dog!"

Yet another voice, with perfect boisterous intonation, "We are the knights who say NNNNNEE!"

Followed appropriately with a chorus of random answering NEE from everywhere. Noreen just looks around beaming, having found her muse. Nick joins in but feels at disadvantage at being rusty with Python, hadn't seen Holy Grail since high school, the mythology teacher would show it just for shits.

Somewhere in the midst, the same screech, "How can you have spam, eggs, sausage and spam without the SPAM?"

Noreen: "BUT I DON'T LOIKE SPAM!"

And of course the resounding chant starts up, "SPAM SPAM SPAM SPAM" and she marches out in time.

"Nick aren't you kinda seeing her?"

"Aww leave 'im alone"

"Boy you're gonna have your hands full."

Nick just grabs his notebook and bag and heads to the door, "Alright I'm gonna go talk to a computer."

The room explodes with laughter he can hear clear down the hall.

Mar 10, 2019

Dinner Concert

The dining hall looked like few of them had seen it, tablecloths, place settings with napkins. It had been a decent weather day so no need for Nick to wear his dad's topcoat, just his hallowed Penny's suit from a road trip and his choice of the old man's ties, which also included some of the old old man's ties at this point. You can't go wrong with black wool, two piece, and the tie had a nice silvery diamond pattern with a metallic red.

Their table was toward the back as Goody figured it would keep the pressure off of them some and allow for a little bantering. "You clean up well, Mr. Swanson!" he chides.

He was one of the first ones there, as it's always nice to let the crowd fill in after he gets somewhere. Basketball Dave is there, and Bruce with his wife, quite a bargain of an evening for just one ticket. Nick found it invigorating that the average age on this campus was 28 as many were non-traditional students that had been laid off from somewhere, or else, just starting afresh once their kids had gotten older.

One time back when Nick was doing campus tours for admissions, he was showing around this kid and his grandma. They had gotten to the Koch building that contained the library and the med tech departments, such as EMT, Radiology, Dental Hygeine, etc. Since this prospect was looking at Engineering Tech they just stayed in the foyer for a quick overview, but then one of the 'non-trad' students that Nick had a couple classes with happened by. So Nick tries to bring him into the conversation, and after a couple comments gives ol' Ben a friendly jab. Ben just fires back with a very boisterous "AWWW KISS MY ASSS" right in the open door to the library.

After exchanging wide-eyed glances with his guests Nick pretty much decided that this kid wouldn't be enrolling anytime soon.

So he takes the spot next to basketball Dave and they catch up on automotive matters, as they both have '70s rides. Nick had been granted a decent looking '76 Cordoba in white, kinda dangerous looking, maybe even sexy, at least in low light. Dave had a very nice '78 Malibu with the 305 that had some punch, just riding around the parking lot it would set you back in your seat just enough to count. His 318 would probably need some attention to get that kind of curve, but that would have to happen in a different season.

As the tables filled up, the U music director, donned in a tux and tails, took the mic to welcome us all and point out that dinner would start in a few moments and then in roughly 45 minutes we'd be instructed to turn our attention to the orchestra.

The servers started showing up with their trays and distributed the greens, the veggies, the starches, and equal parts roast beef and marinated chicken breasts. It seems the campus has a very well organized catering department, everyone was impressed.

Eventually the mic once again came alive with someone's touch, this time president of Eastern Illinois Technical College extending welcome from the entire campus, glad you all could join us and we hope you enjoy the evening. Play ball.

Once again the music director takes the mic, this time with his baton in hand, as the musicians emerge from a side room toward the chairs and music stands on the platform. 

"Tonight you will be treated to a selection of selection of concertos from Tchaikovsky, Beethoven and others, as you will see in your program sheet. The program will last about an hour and 15 minutes, and we ask that you hold your applause until the end of the program. Concert master tonight is Dr. Gene Wu."

During this introduction Nick can't help but think that one of the violinists has a familiar hair color...and size...and gait, for that matter. That would be just his luck.

So the tuning begins, and a couple of his cohorts, only a couple of the group are missing, subtly try to match the lead pitch, only to earn the deserved exasperated looks.

Nick finally gathers the courage to look at his program. Sure enough, there she is in alphabetical order. He signals Goody to look at the same spot on his own program, and he just gets that familiar knowing grin in return. Nick rolls his eyes, alas, there's a conspiracy afoot.

The ensemble with a handful of violins, violas, and a cello fill up the room that one associates with a cacophony of voices at mid-day, with a lush and floral substance that one could almost walk upon. Nick realizes the hall was designed with acoustics in mind.

He feels guilty that his attention is magnetically drawn to just one performer. That confident grace he has come to know and admire has reached into another dimension. He had always known she was an artist, but he could not have been less prepared to behold the elegance with which she saws that fiddle and contributes to such a lush, vibrant, captivating sound.

This naturally brings about some doubts. So many things are in flux, and this is the biggest, and most exciting of variables, the ball on the roulette wheel, actually, this has more possibilities than roulette -

Enough, already, just relax and watch the lovely lady make beautiful music. He tries, but there's too much energy swirling about her, like the time his dad showed him how to look just beside part of an electrical substation you could see the magnetic lines of force, but not when you look directly at it. 

Besides, at a classical concert, at some point the eyes become of little use, and the mind starts to do the seeing. He lets them fall closed but she's still there, in the strings, the tempo, the harmony. The echo in the hall is the distance he might get to close after graduation. After graduation...a wall will come down, at least one would hope, he can't be certain, or logical, but...

Almost too soon he hears a drawn-out note and is surprised by the applause. He opens his eyes to see the conductor facing the crowd and the beginnings of a standing ovation, and before long his table is joining along. The performers take their bows and the director offers a word of thanks and dismissal.

Nick tries to not follow her movement with the rest of the musicians back to their cove. He looks around for a conversation but everyone starts to just clear out. He asks Goody if there's anyone particularly influential he should speak to,

"Oh if you stick around long enough I think you'll find one", and then looks past him, "Well I got all but two here, do I win the bet?"

That clear, lively, yet slightly - just a dab - chesty voice from behind him echos "Yes you do, I am impressed, where'd they all go?"

"Either to sleep or study, I'll take either one at this point. You guys sounded terrific."

"Thank you so much, they put us through the paces this afternoon but it was a good thing- hey,", she grabs Nick's arm, "there's someone I want you to meet."

Goody just grins as she hauls him toward the front and they exchange waves.

"What did you think?"

"I tried not to think. It was a beautiful sound."

"Do you enjoy classical?"

"More into jazz really."

She leads him to a mild looking couple, about 15 years older than his parents, and explains that her sister and law had brought some kids but they had to leave early, so then,

"Nick this is Uncle Herb and Aunt Sue."

They exchange hands and greetings.

"He's one of the Electronic types, their instructor got most of them here tonight."

They smile and nod. Herb asks, "Do you graduate this term Nick?"

"Thankfully, yes, 6 weeks but who's counting."

They chuckle and reach for a hug from their niece before heading off into the evening.

She turns to him. "Well will you look at this."

"I'm afraid to say..."

"Say it mister."

Nick is still quite distracted by the performance black."You look...amazing,"

Comical confounding look, "I look MORBID!"

He just keeps locked on her glowing eyes.

"But thank you."

"Is there anything you can't do?"

"Well....(leans in) I can't really pee standing up that well."

This breaks his gaze, as designed. He just shakes his head and draws a breath.

"Did they feed you guys at least?"

"Yeah we kinda just grazed, don't really want to go on after a full meal."

"Yeah."

He didn't know what to do except match her gaze, but that was overwhelming. It had been a long day since he got talked into working this morning. Probably needs to cut back, he doesn't need the money and it's getting crunch time, even though the project had crossed into the black his other classes were just getting into the thick of things.

"How's your paper coming along?"

"Oh, I don't think I told you yet, the other day I got perfect copy through the modem circuit, so the main part is working, that was the last hurdle."

Her eyes got big and she lunged forward and may have stopped herself. "Oh Nick that's wonderful!"

"Yeah it's a relief, all came down to the wrong capacitor if you can believe."

"I HATE when that happens. So you gonna have something for me to read soon?"

"I'm thinking week after next."

"Can't wait."

He smiled, "Mmm hmm."

The ice was broken, he had another complement in him, but they just gazed at each other a few seconds, and she looked away to think and he knew what was next, but then there was very brief look of disappointment,

"Well I should get going, gonna crash then have a full day grading tomorrow. And they call me part time."

"No rest for the wicked?" he blurts out.

Hands on hips, "Don't you ever forget it either." She steps closer and touches his hand, "Nick I'm glad you were here, it...it helped me up there."

"You made it look easy."

Her eyes did something different just now, inexplicable, just a lightning-quick flash of something as if she were fishing for the expression she wanted and hit the wrong button momentarily.

She finally responds, "You made it feel easy.", then looks down, "Good night Nick," and turns toward the side-room.

"Do you ever listen to the jazz, on Saturday nights?" He blurts out.

She thinks for a second then smiles, "oh, on that -"

"FM 91.7, one of the college stations."

"Sometimes it's nice to relax to, (looks around) sometimes in the tub."

He has to blink to deal with that mental image, then clears his throat, "I usually fall asleep to it, especially if I have to close the store."

"I'll remember that, might be a nice way to get these arrangements out of my head."

"And maybe think about who else might be listening."

She raises an eyebrow, starts to turn while giving a flamethrower of a look that's equal parts accepting a dare and plotting revenge.

He turns as well, escapes into the cool night air and into his Cordoba, dials in 91.7 FM on the SuperTuner, loosens his tie, and just sits a while.

Mar 9, 2019

Playlist

Suddenly and unexpectedly one Thursday afternoon, in the throes of a hectic and draining week, Nick's RTTY decoder modem started sending pleasantly readable text to the PC monitor screen.

After coding up a rudimentary conversion program to read the serial port and convert the 5-bit Baudot characters to ASCII, he had originally just gotten random characters when the phase-locked loop circuit was engaged. And then recently found a better TTL to RS232 converter that just uses a  Darlington pair (in a loose sense) of transistors which yielded about 80 percent correct decode, it was generally intelligible, but with a lot of new lines appearing abruptly where the letter R or D should be, and such.

To leave things at this level of progress would have been acceptable in many ways, since he had stipulated a 90% capture success for the project, plus, in real-world conditions there would be signal fade, interference and other causes for the character stream to falter at times.

But in taking a closer look at a manufacturer spec sheet he noticed a capacitor value he'd muffed, in the small print there was a decimal point that called for a 2.2 rather than a 22. After a quick trip to the stock trays he made the switch, reset the tape and there it was, plain as day, perfectly legible copy.

With a loud clap, "I'm goin' to Disney World!" he blurts out to a near-empty lab.

"Can I go too?" retorts a peer as he heads over to check it out.

Now it's time to show it to Goody, finish up his paper, and sign that appointment sheet.

He needed a lunch before afternoon class, and so did everyone else, and who does he end up behind, chatting away with a colleague, Deb Duntz, who had taught his mandatory Problems in Human Relations course. Deb was a bit different but it was an interesting affair, he remembers her commenting she'd heard that something or other was 'better than orgasm.'

Nick just lags behind and listens, till Noreen gets to "...oh one time I tried debate with a bunch of eighth graders and it sounded like a farting contest, I swore NEVER AGAIN -"

"You should hear our lab sometimes," he interjects.

Noreen slowly turns around and throws a look over her shoulder, looks back at Deb and points a thumb toward Nick, "Are we really going to graduate some of these types?"

Deb steps back and talks to him through the rest of the line, Noreen slips ahead.

*****

Anyone who concentrates intensely needs a diversion here and there. Over the years his escape centered around fiddlefarting with circuits or components or shortwave or audio. But now that electronics has taken center stage, well, the phenomenon of and around this bombshell of a life force has become more than some ethereal cloud of euphoria, it's establishing itself, could even start to resequence his DNA, and so this season of change concerns that which is far beyond mere vocation.

Nick even found the need to seek counsel, covertly of course. He never really talked to Vance about these kinds of things, and his brother was a non-starter.  It took nearly a week to get a hold of Danni, calling the college switchboard over somewhere in Missouri, leaving a message on her machine, tried back in a couple days but left no message, she had to be at least as busy as he was. But on Saturday he got the call back, she was home for the weekend and they met up.

After telling her just enough context to set the scene, he'd met a gal a few years ago that recently became a fixture, the connection is almost painfully obvious and they can joke about almost anything.

"I'm happy for you Nick."

"I knew you would be, but is it crazy, she's established, part of the faculty and here I am...yet..."

"What really matters? I was always struck at how brilliant you are with technical things, I can't even program my VCR to save my life."

"I was always struck by your natural confidence."

"It's a matter of prospective. Nicky, if this is making you both more than you would be apart, then embrace it, it doesn't come along every day."

Danni was now like an old war buddy. She's leaning toward major in Phys Ed, no surprise, but might lean toward Sports Med without having to rip out the sink.

And so, the only thing that makes sense is a tape full of musical selections. He's done this in the past a couple times, to polite reactions, but then, before it was just an excuse to do some dubbing. There are some songs that come to mind, as a defacto canon that has formed in recent weeks, and only a couple are not already in his library, and he has borrowed a disk and a tape to bring it together.

Medium of choice is a fresh TDK 60, with only the title written on the side labels, "Just Listen". The hardest part was making a box liner, this took about an hour in the computer lab trying to line everything up in Word Perfect then getting it right with a dot-matrix printer, with the "Just Listen" on the spine and just "From Nick" on the face. Traditionally he would have included a track listing but that tends to set things up, this needs to be stream-of-conscience, more radio, less MTV.

Then, find time on the laser printer that was available for resumes and finalize it. Then he would find some plain white paper to wrap it in, with just a dedication "For Noreen" on the wrapping, just to keep things discreet. 

And then, he would keep it handy for one of these chance meetings, preferably after the session where they review his paper. So far he'd gotten the tape made and the label file was ready to go on a floppy in his bag. 

As for the song selections...there's a temptation to play it safe, but then, nothing about this is safe. He can't say this is entirely destiny but there's a need to handle this with critical care, and so, well, this calls for total honesty, even if it's a tad out of his comfort zone, even if he can kinda hide in what's become a brand of tongue in cheek, in-joke innuendo that has been with them all along.

He feels she's been completely earnest with him, how can he do any less?

    1. Something To Talk About (Bonnie Raitt)

    2. First Night (Survivor)

    3. One Of These Nights (Eagles)

    4. Magic (Cars)

    5. Tumbling Dice (Stones)

    6. Come Again (Damn Yankees)

    7. Hysteria (Def Leppard)

    8. Mystified  (Damn Yankees)

    9. Don’t Stop Believin’ (Journey)

    10. Just Between You And Me (April Wine)

    11. Love Bites (Def Leppard)

    12. Strung Out (Steve Perry)

To note, barely missing the cut,

    • Have You Ever Wanted Someone So Bad (Def Leppard from a dub of a recently borrowed tape)

    • You Wear It Well  or You're In My Heart (Rod Stewart)

    • Love Will Find A Way (Yes)

    • A number of Queen tracks, like It's Late, too many great ones that almost fit, but..

    • He resists the temptation to include Plaster Caster, thankfully.

Since nothing can ever be cut and dry, the laser printer is a bit of a sore spot since he's thinking he needs to be sending out resumes. With so much buzz about openings there at the school and supposedly at his dad's plant, it has seemed moot thus far.

Just as his junior year of HS wrapped up, good ol' Emmett Bain had gotten Nick's number from a sales receipt after realizing he knew the catalog better than anyone who'd ever worked there. Bain finally closed the deal and brought him in part time, and had managed to keep in touch ever since. Lately Bain was seeming to imply he'd soon need a new store manager within a half hour drive of Jameson. Nick would respond positively if nothing more than to be polite, but who knows. 


Mar 7, 2019

Just The Newbie

 The lab had gradually filled up for the normal session of Interface class, taught by the excellent Thurgood Alfred Glass, who introduced himself as Al but goes by Goody, who is also the program coordinator for pretty much anyone in this course who is about to graduate the EET program this term.

"Alright, a couple of announcements first, nothing you can't handle."

About then, Noreen peeks into the door and Goody waves her in. She's holding a piece of paper and this is the first time Nick has seen her so informal, yet tasteful as always, in tan khakis that taper down to the ankles just above the black flats. She has her hair just clipped midway down the back into a loose tail, with a dark top in the middle and a beige turtle neck, and that winning, kilowatt smile. Her lively eyes appear a cat-like yellow green. But then, who's noticing.

He thinks he should start to get nervous.

"Looks like we'll start with this lovely young lady."

He continues as she does a curtsy, then folds her hands and mouths thank you.

"Gentlemen, seeing as all of you hope to graduate in the near future and are in the throes of your final projects, we're going to continue the tradition of having someone in the English department review a draft of your project paper. I suppose you drew the shortest straw?"

"No I'm just the newbie."

"Gotcha, well go ahead and introduce yourself and explain it better than I can."

"Thanks Al, yes, I am Noreen McDonnell and I’m new to the department, part time, but I am no stranger to tech writing, I haven't taught it here but I wrote manuals and did some editing freelance for a few years. So, for this class, or your papers, we will be setting up a time for you to come over to our office and we'll take a look for spelling, punctuation, grammar -"

"Basically to make sure it's written in English," Goody offers.

"Why...yes that would be fine too. So, um...I'm going to leave this sign up sheet, and, I realize these are not actually due for a while but we shoot for, what, two weeks out?"

"That's about right."

"Good, I'll leave this in his capable hands and I'll be looking forward to seeing all of you. Um, did anyone have any questions?"

Nick, feeling surprisingly courageous, is the only one to raise his hand.

"Not you!" she fires, before going into her favorite impish grin.

Undeterred, "Will we need to bring a red pen as a sacrifice?"

This gets a few chuckles, she looks over at Goody then thumbs over toward Nick. Goody just shrugs.

"I'll have you know that I have an entire cup full of fresh ones, brimming FULL of ink, so bring your worst."

Nick just grins.

"But seriously, I am sure these will be very thoughtful, well organized, you all have been doing this for a while now, so I'm just a second set of eyes."

"That's a good point, guys, how many times with, what, our circuits or programming do we ask for a someone to take a look, and it gets you there that much faster."

"Absolutely, that's a great analogy. Well, I must say they look so eager to run the home stretch, are you just workin' 'em too hard?"

"That must be it, some days I'm about to plug some of them in to the bench supply just to see if it helps."

"Well good luck to you all, see you in a few weeks."

"Thanks Noreen. "

She heads out and Goody takes center front.

"Ok, so along with that, I thought we'd try a new tradition this year. Since you will be stepping out into the world soon, many in jobs and maybe to advance your education, it's good to be exposed to certain things, um, to be immersed in culture, share a fine meal with your colleges in a semi-formal setting."

From the back of the room, "is there any of that within 60 miles of here?"

Goody grins and pauses a sec over the laughter. "Well you can find out soon. I'd like us all to attend the dinner and music the weekend after next."

Silence.

"Now, i realize some of you have work and family commitments, and please talk to me if you do, but I've arranged for free tickets, includes the meal. We'll all dress in our, well, basically our interview clothes for the evening. Yes, it's a classical concert but many of the school leaders will be there, and need I add some influential folks who are part of the job market you are headed into. Questions? Comments?"

After a few seconds, Tall Dave speaks up, "You know, I think this is nice."

There are a couple other affirmations here and there.

"Well thanks for that, I do too, and again, I can't say it affects your grade -"

Someone coughs on purpose, and Goody continues with a knowing grin, "...but it will help establish certain things about you, to yourself, and to others."

Looks around for any more discussion.

"Good? Good. I'll bring up more details as it gets closer and get a head count, but I wanted to give you a chance to set aside the evening if possible."

As the lecture gets underway Nick can't help but drift off station just a bit and think, McDonnell.