Dear Mr. Cameron:
As a courtesy, we are sending you a
copy of this letter we recently wrote to your 15 year old
daughter in response to a query we received from her.
Dear Miss Cameron:
Thank you for your letter. Yes, we are
pleased to report, your father's old high school is still standing
and our library was able to find yearbooks dating "all
the way back" to his graduation. In fact, a few teachers
even remember your father, which I will get to in a moment.
In answer to your first question: In
every picture extant of your father he is well shod, wearing what
I believe were called "earth shoes"
back then. Also, the weather here is moderate, with snow generally
lasting from December until March - hardly the entire school year.
Thus, his descriptions of the conditions under which he "struggled"
to school in the morning do, as you suggested, seem a bit exaggerated.
In fact, our bus logs are (remarkably) still intact, revealing
that not only was your father a registered passenger, but that
his parents paid the extra ten dollars a month for door-to-door delivery.
I am sure there were days when your
father was very "sharply dressed,"
as you state he puts it, but in every single photograph I was able
to uncover he is wearing exactly the same thing: bell bottom blue
jeans with white strings trailing from the edges onto the floor, horizontal
rents in the knees, and no belt buckle. His T-shirt displays a message
easily communicated with hand gestures. His hair hangs past his shoulders
and looks as if it was exposed to a lot of wind -- perhaps he rode
the school bus with the window open.
As to academics and "concentrating
on the basics," one must remember the times. The "basics"
back then may very well have embraced some of your father's elective
subjects, which included "Personal Citizenship,"
"Ecology," and one which apparently
was called "Relevance." We
have no record of what, if anything, was taught in these classes.
What records we do have show that your father did indeed take Geometry,
just as he claims. In fact, he took it his sophomore year, repeated
it his junior year and repeated the course again his senior year -
Geometry was required for graduation.
Now as to Mr. Muggins, who had your
father in a class called "Problems of Modern
Relationships." Mr. Muggins does not wish to dispute the
claim that your father always had his homework done early, he merely
wants to point out that no matter when it was done, it was always
handed in late. In fact, your father sticks out in Mr. Muggins'
mind as having the most outrageous excuses for being unprepared, including
having to evacuate his home because it was infected with the China
Syndrome.
Your father was not, sad to say, President
of the Student Council. Perhaps he is confusing student government
with a social group called "The Slackers,"
which Mr. Muggins recalls was a group of boys who sat in the hallway
and made loud groaning noises whenever an attractive girl strode
past. Your father was assistant vice president of the club, and,
to our knowledge, is the only past member not currently serving
time in a federal penitentiary.
One thing IS completely verifiable:
your father's name is, indeed, carved above the door to the school.
Please advise that, now that we have noticed it, we will need to have
it sanded out and refinished, at a cost of approximately three hundred
dollars. We would appreciate it if your father would agree to pay
for the damage without our having to engage lawyers.
The honor roll to which he apparently
referred is not above the door, it hangs outside my office. I
will leave unanswered the question as to whether his name is upon
it.
Thank you very much for your letter,
which we found most amusing. Be sure to tell your father hello from
Mr. Muggins.
:-)