New York City has many fine universities, some more
exclusive than others - yet the one to which I was accepted required neither superior
SATs or a small fortune in tuition fees.
In fact, it’s still free and only yards away – the University
of the Streets!
It can be a challenging institution – I once had a bayonet tickle
my Adam’s Apple in Tomkins Square, and was jumped on by 3 desperados near Gramercy
Park; but despite these inconveniences I received my bachelors summa cum laude at
NYC’s extensive classroom of taverns, saloons, and most importantly, its rigorous
after-hours establishments.
I also studied abroad for the occasional semester. Just
before the collapse of the Soviet Union I traveled to Lithuania with the
free-form poet, Copernicus.
After our concert and reception in Vilnius I listened to my
companion converse with our taxi driver in a scholarly mixture of French and
German. Suddenly he shattered the Soviet silence with a Brooklyn bellow, “Are
you kiddin’ me! Every city in the universe has an after-hours bar!”
When the taxi-driver reassured him that such was not the
case under “these damned Russians,” I knew this would be a wasted semester.
My favorite campus was the Kiwi Social Club on 9th
Street and Avenue A, technically speaking it wasn’t even an after-hours as it
operated 24/7 including Christmas Day.
I had a “Road
to Damascus” moment therein when I awoke to the genius of John Coltrane’s music.
My mentor, Jimmy Reece, an African-American academic and
student of the night sensed my breakthrough and heartily congratulated me, “You
got it, man. You finally got it!”
And I had. From Trane I went on to specialize in Miles, Monk
and a host of other Jazz innovators.
Consider just how much all those hours of delight would have
cost me at Columbia or Fordham – not to mention that in those hallowed halls
I’d have done so in scholarly sobriety.
On another occasion at a Mafia joint mere yards from NYU I
took a class at dawn on William Butler Yeats from a well-oiled Lou Reed that
forever opened my soul to the genius of the Irish poet. Talk about a “walk on
the wild side!”
While at the renowned UK Club on 13th Street and
3rd Avenue I received an ominous lecture on behavioral science from that
formidable Professor of Punk, Rockets Redglare, which made my hair stand on end
and put me back on the scholarly straight and narrow.
On another liquidy morning Frank McCourt gave me an intense
private tutorial wherein he declared that any Irishman who wasn’t writing his
memoirs was “a feckin’ eejit” after all the fame and fortune that he had
achieved with Angela’s Ashes.
I soon after buckled down and wrote my own autobiographical thesis
“Green Suede Shoes – an Irish-American Odyssey.”
I received no words of wisdom from Norman Mailer but deep
gratitude for fixing his beloved but debilitated Porsche. This fluke came about
through a chance meeting with a Puerto Rican technical scholar at Save The
Robots an early morning educational establishment on Avenue B.
I can still picture the glow of appreciation in Mr. Mailer’s
amazing blue eyes when Professor Mendez and I parked his purring, souped-up vehicle
outside his Brooklyn Heights apartment.
How much did all of this late night cavorting cost me, you
might inquire. It’s hard to say but I did get at least a 40% discount on my
fees, for back in the old New York late night academia one always received the
3rd drink on the house, and thereafter the 5th, 7th until
class ended or the professor behind the stick dismissed you for the day.
To top it all, when I was finally awarded my PhD I was gloriously
debt free. Now match that against the debilitating student loans that most
scholars will have accrued in their pursuit of academic excellence.
Alas in these troubled times the hallowed institution of the
after-hours appears to have been supplanted by the gym and the Internet.
And yet who knows what the future will bring in this looming
recession. The thirst for knowledge will never be satisfied and there will
always be those who seek it out in the University of the Streets.
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