EPISODE 91 PUT YOUR WARM AND TENDER BODY NEXT TO MINE (School Dance Oct. 1963)

EPISODE  91   PUT YOUR WARM AND TENDER  BODY NEXT TO MINE (school dance, Oc.t 1963


alan skeoch
August 9, 2020

Teen agers did dress  up  for dances but I do  not remember suits and ties on the boys

Note:  I have told this story many  times but I think it is worth repeating 
now…impact of social distancing  has  changed  so much.

Setting: Parkdale Collegiate Institute, School Dance Oct. 1963

I was  a new teacher at Parkdale Collegiate in 1963 which  meant I  was only a
few years older that the senior students. Taught for about 6 weeks.  And that, I believe, was the heart of
the problem.

“Mr. Skeoch,  you along with Alison  Petrie have been assigned as  chaperones
at the school dance.”
“Fine.  Any advice?”
“Just make sure no one is  smoking inside the school…”
“What if I catch a smoker.”
“Throw him out.”
(That sounded easier to say than to do.  I did not
know the students, especially the senior students.)

We had  an overflow population at the school in  1963.  The baby boomers boosted the student
body  from a low of 400 in the 1950’s to a bursting 1,400 by 1963.   So many students that the
tennis  court and any other space was now filled  with portable classrooms.  Mine was the
furthest from the school.  Charmingly isolated.  So far away  that most students  did not know
I was  a  teacher.   Fortunately a few senior students knew me as a  football  coach…new one.
For most kids, however, I was  an unknown as was  my co-chaperone Alison Petrie.  She was
very short.  Easily mistaken as  a  student.   

Marjorie came with me that October evening.  We liked to dance and thought this was  a good
chance to have fun and show off  a  few of our rock and roll dance steps.   The gymnasium
was packed  with kids.  Cheek to jowl as it were.  Or, better said, they “put their warm and 
tender bodies next” to each other.   The girls dressed to deliberately entice male admirers…
short skirts as I remember.   

Sex seems  to encourage combat among male animals…including male students.  They can
behave like bull moose in rutting season.   

We did not get a chance to dance much that evening.   We were really police officers.
Who  came to the dance?  Not just our students  but there were lots  of  strangers
from god knows  where.  Alison and I could not tell Parkdale students from anonymous 
marauders seeking to rob Parkdale females from Parkdale males.  

How the hell did these strangers get into the dane in the first place?  They had friends on
the inside…at the door.  And there was really no rule that strangers could not come to the dance.
We grew up in the 1950’s when weekly dances were common and  moose rutting performances
were rather rare.   At my high school, Humberside, the most rebellious activity at my first school
dance was  passing crocks full of  hard  cider around the dance floor.  Teachers thought it
was unfermented.   No fights.  The rotgut just made me sick.

Lots of  pop tunes n 1963 like Johny Cash and  ‘Ring of Fire’…Roy Orbison’s ‘Blue  Bayou’..or Bobby 
Vinton’s ‘Blue Velvet’.

Wow, did Johnny Cash ever fire up student dances…opening lyrics reveal much”

Love is a burning thing
And it makes a fiery ring
Bound by wild desire
I fell in to a ring of fire
I fell in to a burning ring of fire
I went down, down, down
And the flames went higher
And it burns, burns, burns
The ring of fire
The ring of fire



On that October night in 1963 the gymnasium was quite dark.   And  sometimes the slow dances
were so magnetic  that bodies seemed bound together…positively charged  magnets.  That was
a bit of a  concern so we turned  on a few lights.  Not a  popular thing to do.  “Who the hell do
those new teachers  think they are…police officers…morality officers””  We got some nasty looks.

“Alison, I  am going to patrol the halls for a few minutes. 
Will you and  Marjorie be OK in the gym?”
“Fine.”

Seemed to me I had better check that no one is smoking in the school.  If anyone was  smoking
it would be done in the halls.  And sure enough there were a bunch  of boys, maybe 5 to 6
of them with lit cigarettes in the main hall.   A challenge!

“Put out those cigarettes, now.”
“Who says?”
“I say.”
“Who the hell are you?”
“I teach here…placed in charge of this  dance.  No smoking.”
(mumbled  comments may have been ‘Fuck You’ or some less
challenging few words.)
“What did  you say?”
“Free country…we can say what we want…”Prick!”
“Are you Parkdale students?”
(Silence.  They were apparently not our students.  I did  not know for sure.
And I think  they still held their cigarettes.}
“OK,  That’s it, boys.  Get out of  here.  Now.  There’s the front door…leave.”
(I hoped my voice did  not crack as I got tough.  I  am not a fighter…always looked
to de-escalate confrontations because I had seen too many gang fights as a  kid
in the late 1940’s when my brother and I were small and lived in the middle of 
Diufferin Park.   One gang member got hit over the head with a lead pipe as I
remember.   Bottom line, I was not as  tough as the situation in 1963 escalated
into something that could  be physical.)
“Get out.  All of you.  Now.”
“Teacher.  Think you are a big shot.”
“OUT!”
“Bet you haven’t got the guts to come outside with us.”
“I’ll escort you out.  NOW!”
“Chicken shit teacher…”
“OUT!”
“Come out yourself.”

This image  captures the tough guys … complete with cigarette…but these are
not the boys.


Here I made a big mistake.  The challenge to come outside should have
been ignored.  But that meant a loss of face and by then Parkdale students
had gathered around.  So I  went outside with the boys who continued to
mutter a mixture of  challenges and  obscenities. “Fucking teacher.”
may have been one of the expressions although the F word was  uncommon
in the 1960’s.  More likely I  was called a ‘Son of a bitch”.  Either way  the challenge
had been made and  stupidly I herded the boys  outside.

Outside .  Jameson  Avenure was dark as  a dungeon. The street was lined with
magnifcent old Elm trees that filtered the street lights.  Our school had no exterior
lighting.

This  was not good.  The boys gradually moved  around me.  Closing off my escape
route back  to the school.  They were getting ready  to do something.  Maybe pound
the shit out of me.  Maybe they were bluffing as I was bluffing.   I was  scared but
kept my back straight.

“Big tough teacher, eh?”
“Get out of here.”
“Afraid  to  do anything but talk…no guts.”
 
The circle was closing.  I was in bad trouble.  If I touched one of these
boys then I had taken the first step.  They would be defending themselves.
No touching on my part, for sure.   But they seemed to intend to do more 
than touch  me.   I  was trapped.  In the dark.  Strangers.  Hot tempers.
Maybe girls watching….which  would be a  catalyst for violence.

Then a  wonderful thing happened.   Now, nearly 60 years  later I remember that]
moment as if was yesterday.  Out of the darkness behind  me came a voice.

“Are you having any trouble Mr. Skeoch?””

And a few Parkdale boys emerged, led by Ted  Spencer who was on our football
team as  were the other boys who emerged into the filtered  light.  They knew I
was over my head and might need them if push came to shove.

The tough guys who were really just older teen agers from another school.  Boys
with too much testosterone…They just drifted away…melted into the anonymity of
Jameson Avenue and Queen Street West.  Gone.   As if a mirage.

“Thanks, Ted, I was in trouble.”
“No problem, sir, we knew what was happening.”

Events back  in the gym had  also  taken a turn for the worst.  Well,
not that bad,  really.  But Alison  Petrie and  Marjorie had their own
troubles.

“How are things in the gym, Marjorie?”
“Not good.”
“What happened?”
“Two or three boys were talking to Alison…”So I hear
you come from the Maritimes, Miss Petrie?”
“Yes, Nova Scotia.”

“What’s  wrong with that, Marjorie?”
“Lots.”
“Like?”
“As the boy in front was saying pleasant things,  the boy  behind Alison
was slowly unzipping her dress…very slowly.”
“Who? Point them out.”
“Alison and  I have decided best to let things alone…nothing really
happened.  The boys thought it was very funny.”

Eventually the dance ended.  All the lights  came on  and the students 
dispersed.   That was my  first school dance in which I  had  been
put in charge.  The  principal and senior teachers were at fault I believe.
Two new teachers … kids themselves…should never have been put in
charge of  a  school dance.

Sad to say but today, in 2020, school dances  are rare.  There might be
a  sort school dance in an afternoon but a school dance at night seems
non existent.  Too bad, really.

Then again there is  no point to dancing any  more.  Why?  Social 
distancing.  Covid  19  has killed dancing. Can  you imagine dancing with a girl or a boy who are
sx  feet distanced  from each other.  No chance of them “putting their
ware and tender bodies” close together.

alan  skeoch
August 9, 2020

Post Script 
 For tje Gppd  Times  was  written in 1970…seven years  after the event
…but the meaning applies



“For The Good Times”
(originally by Kris Kristofferson)

Don’t look so sad, I know it’s over.
But life goes on, and this old world will keep on turning.
Let’s just be glad we had some time to spend together.
There’s no need to watch the bridges that we’re burning.

Lay your head upon my pillow.
Hold your warm and tender body close to mine.
Hear the whisper of the raindrops,
Blowin’ soft against the window,
And make believe you love me one more time,
For the good times.

I’ll get along; you’ll find another,
And I’ll be here if you should find you ever need me.
Don’t say a word about tomorrow or forever,
There’ll be time enough for sadness when you leave me.

Lay your head upon my pillow.
Hold your warm and tender body close to mine.
Hear the whisper of the raindrops,
Blowin’ soft against the window,
And make believe you love me one more time,
For the good times.








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