Stealing pumpkins

Click to hear Andy Griffith describe a similar event.

This post is probably a better fit for October, but I’m in the mood for writing it now, so I’m writing it.

October 1974, I was a freshman at Oregon State. I lived at Dixon Lodge, and had just moved in the first of that month.  I had been at Dixon long enough to have a pretty good sense of my fellow Dixon Lodgers.  Most were good sorts.  Rambunctious some, yeah.  Bit of a rascal in some of them, sure. 

They considered the few encounters with campus police to be somewhat of a friendly contest. (Now, I’m sure the campus police had a different viewpoint).  But their scrapes with the campus police were on the order of pranks, not crimes: using a 2×4 hooked to the flag lanyard to put a garbage can over top of a flag pole at night.  A sea lion head in one of the barrels scattered around campus from which folks would pick up the campus newspaper.  And, of course, the odd parking ticket or two.

OSU MU Quad - click for OSU website

I trusted these guys.  I trusted their basic sense of right and wrong.  They came from farming, logging backgrounds. So when we were told that we were all going out to steal pumpkins for our pumpkin carving function with Azalea House (the women’s co-op next door), I was taken aback.  They were stealing from the farmers, that just wasn’t right!  No, I couldn’t go.  I had to study, I had a

Azalea House

date, I was visiting friends – anything to avoid going out and stealing.  No excuse was good enough for John Joiner, or “Dad” Joiner as he became known.  He badgered me and wheedled and pushed, until he finally wore me down, and I went, unhappily, but I went along.

Jimmy Hill had acquired a couplle of jugs of raw apple cider from the Food Tech building across

Wiegand Hall - Food Tech - click to see what makes it famous

campus.  They had been sitting next to the baseboard heater for a few days,, and had fermented just enought for a bit of sparkle in the cider.  Jimmy brought the jugs along, they were passed around, and I had my share.  But I wasn’t too keen on this expedition.  I tried to keep my mind off the purpose of the trip by listening to the jokes and stories, sipping cider, and enjoying the breeze in my face as we bumped along the country roads in the back of Joiner’s pickup.  From time to time I looked up at the full moon and wondered what I was going to do.

NOT harvested pumpkin patch - click for some punkin stealin' music

Joiner turned onto a dirt road, followed by Gordy Locke in his pickup, also loaded with eager pumpkin thieves. Wait! what was this?  I knew a harvested field when I saw one, and these fields we were passing through were harvested.  Grain stubble on the left and…was it, could it be…yes! That was a harvested pumpkin field on the right, a small, lonely pumpkin lying here and there.  Whew! I breathed a big sigh of relief!  I wasn’t going to

harvesting pumpkins - see the area where the truck is driving? It was like that only just dirt!

participate in a thieving raid, my faith in my new friends had been instantly restored.  We were only gleaning, and they had just been calling it stealing to add a little spice and adventure to the night’s activities.  I relaxed and began to enjoy the night, all of it, the moon, the fresh air, the cider, the special smell a stubble field has on a  warm night, all of it.

The pickups finally stopped by a big pile of pumpkins in the corner

Stubble field - click to see the smashed pumpkin

of a field.  These were obviously leftovers that weren’t worth hauling off.  We jumped out and started tossing pumpkins into the backs of the pickups.  “Wait!” Joiner hollered, “These aren’t the good pumpkins!, the good ones are out in the field!”  I looked down at the pumpkin in my hand.  It looked fine to me, so did all the others in the pile. I kept tossing them into the truck.

THEN! Lights blazed, engines raced, guns were fired, there was hootin’ and hollerin’ (hooting and hollering is just wrong, isn’t it?) and a couple of spotlight beams swept back and forth across the chaos!  Gordy fell back into the bed of his pickup, “I’m hit!” he said and pulled his hand away from his face, smeared with blood.  The other side of his face was spattered with blood, like he’d taken some shotgun pellets to the head.  Now it became something far more serious than a high-jinks outing!  This was serious!  “Stop!” I holllered, “He’s hit!  He’s hit”  But the guys behind the spotlights kept laughing and shouting and shooting.  “They’re crazy”, I thought and I knelt beside Gordy as he lay against the pumpkins piled at the front of the pickup bed.  Someone jumped into the driver’s seat, and started up the engine with a roar.  I saw the white letters above the rear window of Gordy’s custom pink pickup – “Jesus Saves” flashed, white-on-pink each time the spotlights swept by.  “I sure hope so” I said to myself and prayed that Gordy’s injuries were minor, but I wasn’t very hopeful.  We left the din and chaos and destruction behind us as the pickup raced up the dirt road we had just  come down, throwing billows of ghostly dust clouds into the moonlit night.  We finally stopped at a big old oak tree, and the farmers seemed to shink back into the night as things suddenly went quiet.

I was just getting my heartbeat back to normal after such a narrow escape, and Gordy was saying his was fine, just nicked, when John Joiner started preaching mission and destiny and revenge.  “They’ve gone back to their houses” he ranted. “They think they’ve scared us off.  But, by golly, this just makes me mad, and more determined than ever.”  Eyes lit with hope and growing fervor started following John while he paced back and forth in front of the motley crowd.

“No they haven’t!” I countered. “They caught us once, and they’ll be up all night laying for us to come back again!”  I knew, I’d been on the other side.  I knew what stirred in a farmer’s belly when somebody tried to steal his crop from the field he had sweat and labored over for the past year.  I knew they were still out there in the dark, waiting.  But my voice fell on deaf ears, John held them all in thrall, and Pied Piper like, he led them back down that self-same dirt road that was playing such a big part in the night’s drama.  I sat on the tailgate of one of the pickups and watched all of my new friends and brothers marching to their doom.  Something, something I didn’t understand then, and not really now, but something compelled me to join them.  Not because I was eager to steal pumpkins or get back at the farmers, NO! I was certain something bad was gonna happen.  I had seen the cold viciousness of our foes, when they laughed and pursued and fired whle Gordy fell back, dangerously wonded, against that pile of pumpkins.  I understood protecting their crops, but not their joy in hurting someone. They didn’t care if Gordy had been hit…no, take that back, they cared, they were delighted that they’d hit one of us.  They didn’t care a fig about Gordy or his wounds. 

No, I went because I needed to be there.  If something bad was going to happen, I needed to be there to help my buddies, not sitting on the tailgate of a pink pickup, dangling my legs, while everyone else were being slaughtered, too far away for the white painted words of salvation on the cab behind me to do much good.

So I followed, hustling to catch up.  Dreading every step, sure it was leading to my doom…or at least to something that was going to hurt bad, one way or the other.  I knew that before the dawn broke, I would either be dead or in jail – and I wasn’t sure which I preferred..  Dead was dead, but jail meant I would have to answer to my father, and how was I going to explain to my hard working farmer of a dad that I, born and raised on a farm, had been stealing pumpkins?

I finally caught up with the foolish bunch, laughing, yakking, joking, eager to show those farmers a thing or two.  I didn’t say a word, unusual for me, because I had already tried to warn them of what was ahead,  to no avail.  So I plodded along, trying to figure out a way to minimize the coming carnage, as we marched into the valley of death.

Reaching the field, I braced myself…nothing!  We ventured further into enemy territory; I was looking everywhere at once, trying to see the attack as early as possible…nothing!  Maybe the farmers in Oregon were different from those I grew up around in California,  maybe they were sitting back, snug in their house with a couple bottles of whiskey and many stories of their exploits that night.

Just as  I relaxed, thinking the fellows would pick up a few more pumpkins and we could go, BANG!  Bright headlights, sweeping spotlights, shots and shouts and laughter accompanied by the bass rumble of powerful pickup engines as we all scattered like quail across the bare fiield.

I was in a prison-escape movie.  Running as hard as I could in the darkness, diving to the dirt as a spotlight swept over me, then up and running again.  Whirling, shouting, lights spinning, guns blazing, shouts, cries - CHAOS! I thought I would be caught at any second, but until I was immobilized, I was surviving.  I could see the dark treeline in the distance that marked a river or creek, and I reckoned that the trees and brush and water afforded better chances of survival than the bare dirt I was running and sprawling on.  Up, run, dive, lay still, up and run again.  Over and over…then wait! right in my path was a HUGE pumpkin.  NOW I was ready to take it.  Some residual thread of defiance, assertion of self, in the midst of complete anarchy.  I would be chased off, yes – but I would nevertheless return home with a prize – IF I returned home.  Picking up the pumpkin, I ran,  no, I jigger-jogged.  Pumping my legs as hard and as fast as I could, holding the pumpkin, more than 2 feet in diameter, in front of me, I looked like a desperate, very pregnant woman moving forward as fast as possible while cradling her belly with its precious cargo in her arms – jigger-jogging.

So now it was up with the pumpkin, jigger-jog as hard as I could, throw myself face to the ground with the pumpkin stretched forward of my head until the light passed over, then up, scooping the pumpkin  and jigger-jogging toward the distant tree line.  Over and over and over.  Shorter distances between dives, because my mobility had been seriously diminished.

I calculated one more hard run would take me to the trees – I was up with my pumpkin, and just approaching cruise speed when a 3 foot blue flame belched out from the trees, accompanied by a thunderous boom!  I don’t believe I have ever been so terrified in all of my life! I dove into a weed covered ditch to hide from that dragon’s tongue.  Luckily it was dry; I could not afford the

Yes - cannon Click for more cannon information

luxury of checking relative humidity before seeking refuge.  I had no idea if the cannoneers had seen me or not (Cannon, to guard pumkins? Really?) but I wasn’t taking chances.  I burrowed deeper into the weedy ditch.  Then I spied Greg Strausbaugh kneeling beside the dirt road that the farm-truck cavalry was using for positioning their next assault.  “Psssst!”, I was desperate, “Straus, get down!”   He ignored me or didn’t hear me.  My motivation was survival, not brotherly concern.  Strausbugh would draw the attention of  the attackers, and I was scant distance from Straus – they would surely see me too!  I started inching away from Strausbaugh, dragging my 3X-Large pumpkin with me.  The pickups rumbled by, stopping neither for Greg or myself.  Finally, picking up my pumpkin I continued down the same road, trudging in the deep dark behind  the headlight cones of intense brightness.

The pickups increased the distance rapidly, and soon I was walking along in silence and solitude…and dark.  It felt safe in the dark.  Circling around the back side of the field (I had charged into the mouth of the cannon directly away from Gordy’s pink pickup), I was finally on the home stretch – only about a mile to go to the extraction poiint.  As I made my way toward safety and home, I ventured a smile of relief and exhultation – I was going to make it!  Then headlights  flashed on and swept in a brilliant arc toward me, a darkened pickup lighting up as it turned onto the road behind me.  I rushed into the stubble field  on my right.  The same stubble field that offered me reassurance as we arrived so long ago, was now giving me safe haven as I tried to leave this killing field.

Deep into the stubble field, I began hearing the cries, back and forth, of our two Venezuelan cohorts.  Trying to be helpful with  my rusty spanish I yelled, “Marcha a la luna”; trying to get them to move toward the moon – but telling them to walk to the moon- which was lowering toward the western horizon.  West, toward pink pickups and salvation.  Soon, the slogging through the stubble became too tiresome, so I moved back onto the easier walking afforded by the road.  Still carrying my pumpkin, I was thinking about what a great hero I would be, emerging from the smoke of battle with such a glorious prize!  When again, lights boomed on behind me!  Scampering into the stubble field again, like a frightened deer, I tripped on the rough ground and went down.  Down full onto my great pumpkin, smashed across my chest.  Nothing of glory and greatness now but pumpkin mush and a few stringy seeds smeared across the front of my shirt.

Tired of the stubble trek again, like the Kipling fool’s wobbling finger, I went back to the road, meeting up with Lester Suzaki on the way.  Les and I marched forward in silence, grateful for company after terrified isolation.  Again lights swept into position behind us.  We both thew ourselves to our left (both tired of fighting the stubble field – at least I was), and through a blackberry hedge.  Evidently our leap was through a gap in the hedge, because neither of us were scratched.  But I don’t remember seeing a gap there, only a frantic desire to put the screen of blackberry bushes between me and that INFERNAL road!

We walked to the end of the blackbeerry hedge where stood the big, old oak, under which Gordy’s  pink pickup and Joiner’s blue one, sat waiting to take us to home and safety.   As we rounded the end of the blackberrys, my fright-numbed mind was slow in registering the sheriff’s cruiser, the police car and two or three strange pickups and faces and guns that were parked and milling about under the tree.  I numbly stumbled forward, tired of the chase and willing for my fate.  Les was evidently of a similar frame of mind.

When the gathered group noticed us, they burst out in laughter, slapping each other on the shoulders and  bending over at the waist to better gather the deep guffaws they bellowed  into the night air.  There were the faces I saw behind the spotlights!  Law enforcement was chuckling! There was Gordy, without a scratch!

Dixon Lodge - click for website. WAS a men's house, then co-ed, NOW all women...because of stuff like stealing pumpkins.

We - Lester Suzaki, the Venezualens, I and all the other freshmen had just been initiated into Dixon Lodge.

 

The perfect solution to a politically created problem.

First we must agree that illegal immigration is illegal.  We must also agree that a fundamental responsibility of the federal government is control of its own borders.  Without such agreement you are arguing something other than what is good and right for the United States of America, and if what is good and right for the United States is not your intention, then we have nothing to talk about regarding this topic, and you are excused.

So, the first order of business is to secure the borders – and no, that imperative does not require “comprehensive immigration reform” to implement.  All that is required is the will to secure the borders.  Fence, virtual fence, increased Border Patrol, National Guard, military forces, moats and alligators – I don’t really care.  Use them all, and use them with purpose and intent. 

If you were a husband and a father, and there were people creeping your house every night, raiding your fridge, taking your cash and sometimes sneaking drugs to your kids, how long would it take you to figure out a way to stop these guys? Would you try to figure out a comprehensive plan for them to have permanent, legal access to your home and a voice in your household decisions before you tried to stop them?  I doubt it!   Your first duty to your family would be to stop the intrusion.  Failing that, your family is morally entitled to leave you to wallow in your own abject incompetence in failing to perform your most basic duty to them. 

If you invited someone to visit your home for a specific period of time, and that person ignored the agreed term of the visit and continued to stay and behave as one of the family to the detriment of your true family – you would be failing your basic responsibility once again if you did not expel them from your home.

 In either of these situations, could you reasonably expect your wife and children to have any patience with your continued whining about the “bigger picture”, the difficulties of locking the doors and securing the windows, how tough it is to locate the unwanted guest, how useful the guest has been in cleaning the home and washing the dishes or how concerned you are about the future and family of these intruders?  Of course not!

We often hear that the physical border is not the whole problem and of course it isn’t, but acknowledging that does not excuse inaction.  Back to the family analogy – if you had nightly intruders AND a guest who has overstayed her welcome, would your wife accept your lack of action regarding the intruders because, as you continue to point out, the intruders are not the only problem, and stopping the intruders will do nothing to get rid of the unwanted guest? Certainly not!    

Suppose many, or even all, of the home invaders are truly good people with sad stories, would you then be excused should you endanger the health and wellbeing of your family because of your sympathy for their plight?  Not in the least!

At this point, let us clean up our terminology: What do you call someone who comes, uninvited, into your home and helps themselves to what you have provided for your family?  I know some who would call them a brother-in-law (I wouldn’t, I have great brothers-in-law), but none of us would call them uninvited guests, unofficial family members or accidental residents.  You would call them deadbeats, crooks, trespassers, thieves, robbers and worse.  In the national conversation we should call them foreign invaders – which they are.

I hope these analogies have helped clear your view of the politicians and pundits who make excuses for the government shirking its most basic duty – securing the national borders against invasion; and a duty that is closely akin to the first – keeping track of our foreign visitors and insisting that they leave when they said they would.

I’m not going to dwell overmuch on exactly how to secure our borders and monitor our guests, but I will make this point:  The technology exists today to allow any business to secure their buildings and property against almost all intruders, and to know if a visitor left at the appointed time or if they are still on the premises.  It can be done.  NOTE:  The impossibility of securing against all intruders does not excuse a refusal to secure against most of them.

Once the borders are secure, we can talk about what to do with the foreign invaders currently within our borders.  Oh yes!  It is impossible to deport them all!  Who’s going to do it?  How will it be done?  All of the red herrings are dragged across the logical path.   Let me lay out a simple, effective and just plan, keeping in mind that simply granting “a path to citizenship” spits in the collective eye of everyone who took, or is taking, the time and effort to play by the rules.  Who would you rather have in your home, the person who comes at the appointed time for the agreed purpose, following the established protocol, or the one you find, unexpectedly, sitting in your Barcolounger watching your Sony big-screen, eating your Cheetos and drinking your Henry’s?

On the other hand, many worthwhile businesses would be unable to continue if every illegal were suddenly deported.  So here is my plan…

First, we secure the borders – I cannot emphasize this enough, because without that we are simply hauling hay for the “howdys”.

Second, we insist that everyone within our borders have proof of legal standing – birth certificate, green card, naturalization papers, visa, etc.  Those without such proof will be given a short grace period, say three months, to register their illegal status and establish a schedule for authorized re-entry (these schedules could be arranged so that a business did not lose its entire workforce at one time).  After the grace period, anyone discovered, by whatever means, without proof of legal standing or proof of registration of illegal status (with a scheduled re-entry date sometime in the future) will be deported immediately – and upon such deportation will not be allowed back into the United States for ANY reason.  If their baby daughter will die without their kidney donation…they’d better find a way to donate that kidney from outside the US borders.  If their sainted mother is on her deathbed and begs to see her son one last time, he’d better appear to her in a vision, because he’s not entering the country to see her.  We MUST have the will to see this through – keeping in mind, THEY made their choices and they are reaping the fruit of those choices.

Third, once registered and scheduled for authorized re-entry, the invader has a choice – do they wish to become a US citizen or not?  If they wish to become a US citizen, they get in line with everybody else PERIOD and their former invader status can be used against their petition for citizenship.  If they don’t wish to become a citizen, that decision is permanent and final.  Under no circumstances will they ever be allowed to vote or receive public aid, of any kind, including Social Security – although they will be required to pay all taxes and withholdings along with everybody else.  (A long term visitor in your home can expect to participate in household duties and share in household expenses, but they shouldn’t expect to inherit anything upon your death).  Should a person choose noncitizen status, they will return to their country of citizenship for expedited processing for temporary resident status, allowing the United States to check their backgrounds and deny re-entry to drug dealers, gang bangers, rapists, murderers, thieves and other unsavory characters.  Their temporary status allows them to stay only as long as they are legally and gainfully employed.  Children born to temporary residents do not receive automatic citizenship – they are treated just like any other foreign national when they reach the age of majority.  Any legal, alien resident who commits a felony or certain, specified, misdemeanors will be deported immediately upon conviction, with no obligation on the citizens to provide transportation of person or property or any other assistance to the families of the deported alien.  Said families must either meet all requirements of legal residency or leave.

Finally, any entity (i.e. city, state, church, business, individual or institution), found to be knowingly harboring or shielding foreign invaders or assisting same in fraudulent voting activity will lose all rights of citizenship.  In cases of nonpersonal entities, the principals of the involved entity as well as any individuals directly involved in such activity will forfeit their rights of citizenship.  

This last may cause a large uproar among certain groups of people.  When it does, we need to ask ourselves what would motivate someone to encourage, foster and assist a foreign invader.  Once we acknowledge the answer to this question we will clearly see that disenfranchisement is both a just and a benevolent response.

All accepted avenues for petition for legal residence, family, political/religious asylum, etc. will remain open – except for those who are deported for felony activity or failure to register their illegal status. 

For those of us who are Christians, our first concern must always be the salvation of souls.  Obviously, soul salvation is not dependant upon one’s country of residence.  We must then also concern ourselves with the wellbeing of the less fortunate.  While it is true that, in a natural sense, being born or otherwise legally residing in the United States of America is rare, good fortune, we are not required by God to encourage circumvention of the law or to do so ourselves in our solicitude towards others.  We may still work diligently to assist legal immigration, to help improve conditions in their homeland (which I consider to be the preferred option, since it plants a new seed of native Christians in a needy place) or to otherwise contribute to their health and happiness.  Our Christian faith in no way requires us to put aside good sense regarding this problem, any more than it requires us to allow the needy to invade our homes and threaten the safety and security of our families.

Arsonist sets fire to SUV spray-painted with “Occupy Eugene”, an anarchist symbol, 99%, and other perjorative scribblings

The link to the KEZI article and video are on the image.  The article from the Register Guard is here.  I have always wondered about the size of the role played by the Eugene Anarchist community in the Seattle riots.  It seems pretty evident they played a role, but it is hard to tell how big.  This whole “Occupy” movement thing seems to be hand-crafted for participation by the Eugene crowd.  This article was particularly poignant after my daughter sent me a link to this photo of an anti-Occupier that she found on Dom Giordano’s Facebook page.

Journalism Toy: Phone Interview Recording Device

Day 31 of 1000

Kelly needs to write and publish as many blog, newspaper, and magazine articles as possible to refine her skills:  interviewing, writing, editing etc.  She needs to build a portfolio to help her win future opportunities.  Last week, she signed up with an organization whose charter is to help young journalists of a certain political bent (pretty much in line with Kelly’s bent) to hone their skills and prepare for careers in journalism.  We were very surprised that a couple of days after she signed up, she got a call from one of the editors with an assignment.  Actually, it was a very interesting assignment.  Kelly and I will write more about this after we see if it comes to fruition, but both of us have been scrambling.

Kelly has to contact and interview high mucky mucks and mucky muck wannabes in Washington D.C. by telephone.  She needs to get some quotes so she wants to record the calls.  The first thing we had to do was find out whether it is legal to record phone calls.  It turns out that there are generally two kinds of laws that cover this sort of thing in the U.S.  More than half the states have what is called “one-party consent” laws.  That is, only one of the parties in a phone call has to consent for the call to be recorded.  The rest of the states require that both parties to a call must give their consent for it to be legal to record.  For interstate calls, it is best to err on the side of maximum disclosure.  Fortunately, I found a website that shows that both Washington D.C. and North Carolina are both one-party consent states, so she does not have to declare that she is recording for this article.

Next we had to find a recording device.  We have the great “professional journalist” recorder on its way.  Unfortunately, the recorder is not scheduled to arrive for a few more days, so Kelly will use her laptop as a recorder until then.  I had to find a device that would get the stuff going into and out of the phone into the recording device.  We found the EXACT right device down at Radio Shack.  It is the Olympus TP-7 Telephone Recording Device pictured at the left.  Lorena and I ran down to pick it up while the kids studied after dinner, but Christian and I could not figure out how the silly thing worked.  It seems like a device like this would require at least two plugs:  one for the recording device and one for the phone.  As you can see, it only has one.

After about fifteen minutes we gave up and read the instructions.  All you do is plug the jack into the recording device and put the ear plug in your ear.  If you look closely, you can see that there is a little microphone on the opposite side of the ear plug from the end that goes into your ear.  When you hold your phone up to your ear, both ends of the conversation go into the microphone where the signal is sent down the cable to the recording device and through the earplug speaker into your ear.  It works AWESOME.

We will keep you posted on how Kelly’s new writing gig works out if and when it comes to fruition.

Radio station note:  The person who called Kelly into the interview at the radio station got laid off so Kelly is in limbo with respect to her radio station internship.  She already jumped through all the required hoops at her school–they will give her credit for the internship spring semester, but now she has to figure out whether they still want her.  She sent an email to one of the hosts.  We will keep you posted on that, too.