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- From: Shic Osega
- Newsgroups: alt.prose
- Subject: The Constant Student (part 1)
- Date: 26 Jan 1993 11:48:27 GMT
- Organization: Sun Microsystems UK Ltd.
- Lines: 46
- Distribution: world
- Message-ID: <1k38ebINN1tm@uk-news.uk.sun.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: napier.uk.sun.com
-
-
- THE CONSTANT STUDENT Part 1
-
- from 'the Erroneous Memoirs of a Fool`, by Shic Osega
-
-
- It was early/mid September 1990, and a new town. Armed with numerous
- suitcases, a pioneering spirit and an air of adventure I staggered out of the
- train station to commence my life as a Polytechnic student in the loveable
- north-east of England. A short taxi-ride to my student 'digs' later, I
- climbed into my closet-cum-bedroom with my baggage but without my pioneering
- spirit or sense of adventure. The taxi-driver had put paid to those with his
- stories of student murders and danger areas where southerners were hated
- above all else. A glimpse at my allotted abode for the next nine months was
- the final straw. A brown felt carpet covered a series of squeaky
- floorboards. The carpet was offset with brown-grey curtains which decorated
- a window view into a back alley. The wallpaper had been allowed to mature
- until it had achieved that distinctive beige hue typified by old newspaper
- left exposed to the sunlight. Had there been room I might have prostrated
- myself on the floor in miserable lament. Instead I sandwiched myself between
- the wash basin and wardrobe and sobbed quietly for a few hours.
-
- My room was one of six bedrooms in an old terraced house owned and maintained
- by the Polytechnic. Directly opposite the Polytechnic main building, and
- situated in close proximity to the town centre, it formed a square with two
- Polytechnic buildings and another terrace, also owned by the Polytechnic.
- Being so close to the local amenities, the square proved a popular place for
- local drunks to crash out on a Friday and Saturday night. With its exclusive
- student population, the square was also an oft-frequented 'stomping ground'
- for abusive locals with their general bias against 'foreigners' from the
- north, south and west (the east being bounded by the sea).
-
- Until now I had passed the entry requirements for two of the locals' most
- hated categories of existence, being a southerner and a student. As a
- resident of the square, I later learned that I had also unwittingly added a
- third category to my accolades. The story goes that all locals were evicted
- from the two terraces by the council with the excuse that they were soon to
- be demolished (the terraces, not the locals). But then the Polytechnic
- offered a sizeable sum for the properties and so a stay of execution had been
- granted. The end result, of course, was a number of disgruntled and up-ended
- locals with a grudge against those cosy, spoilt students who were living in
- absolute luxury in six-foot square rooms for twenty-eight pounds a week.
-
-
- ***
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