My very first
paying job was in Chicago. After
looking for a job at want ads and interviewing daily for a month, I landed one
as a research technician at a laboratory located inside Wesley Memorial
Hospital, now a part of Northwestern University Hospital System. That was
August 8, 1961. My whole family moved to Chicago from Manila. My father was sent as an attaché to the
Philippine Consulate in Chicago and the rest of us came as his dependents.
Wide-eyed yet unfamiliar with my new
surroundings, I noticed that at around 4:00 PM, the radio was turned on. Bill, a high -schooler who comes to
wash our glassware, tunes the radio to the broadcast of the baseball game.
Since I was not aware of what’s going on I focused on the musical theme that
opens the show. It was lively, jazzy, a bit jumpy and very catchy to listen
to. After a few days I could hum
it from memory. I looked forward
to the daily broadcast not to listen to the baseball game but to listen to the
theme song. At the end of the
broadcast, I could not care less which team won or lost. I only knew that the theme song would
come on once more to close the show. As I listened to the tune I vowed that I
would remember this tune and use it as landmark of my first job in America and
my initiation to life in the U.S.A.
It never
occurred to me that the theme song could have a name and that it could be a
standard composition borrowed by the radio program. I assumed it was composed for the radio program. The melody rings inside my head. I hear the blaring of the trumpets and
feel the fast tempo set by the drum beats. It was only years later that I found out that the tune is a
composition by Duke Ellington called “Take the ‘A’ Train.”
The early
years in Chicago were spent working and going to school, pursuing my master’s
degree in chemistry. I took the “A” train of the Howard line to stop at Jarvis,
an “A” station. As a
graduate student, I concentrated on getting “A’s” in my courses. Upon
completing my degree, I worked at Abbott
Laboratories, a workplace beginning with the letter “A.”
As I replay
“Take the A Train” in my mind, the picture of a young girl wearing a white lab
coat in Room 262 comes into view.
I had the task of analyzing the concentration of sodium and potassium in
the plasma of patients with muscular dystrophy using flame photometer. Three times a week in the evening, I
walked through the connecting underground tunnel to attend classes at
Northwestern University. Later on, I met a friend taking the same classes I
took, Helen Chu, who invited me to run quickly to her apartment nearby to have
a home - cooked meal before class.
At noon, I
walked through the tunnel to come out on the sidewalk next to Lakeshore Drive
to view Lake Michigan and the Navy Pier building nearby. The lake breeze gently
blowing my face and hair felt refreshing.
Once a month,
all of the members of the research team would be required to come for a 6:00 AM
breakfast and seminar. Breakfast
was served at the cafeteria and paid for by our research leader. One or two of us would be assigned to
give a presentation to the group which numbered about 16. I was asked to give a presentation on volumetric glass ware.
The days at
the lab and at Northwestern University were enjoyable. I was introduced to the
ordinary custom of greeting, smiling, helping and conversing. I picked up a few
lyrics of songs sung by Bill von Eickman who sang songs between assays. I also learned a few Christmas songs
notably, “Sleigh Ride,” “Winter Wonderland,” and “Silver Bells.”
I moved on to
other phases of my life associated with other songs: –
“Raindrops
Keep Falling on my Head” – my days as a Montessori teacher at Near North
Montessori School
“March of the
Soldiers” from “The Nutcracker” – my days directing and teaching at my own
school, Glencoe Montessori School
Songs of
salsa, cha-cha, swing, rumba, bolero, merengue, waltz and fox trot -my days studying
and enjoying the art of ballroom dancing.
I am not quite
sure what songs will stand out as I begin my second career in teaching after a
brief retirement. Once again I
will be teaching young children in a Montessori Charter School. Perhaps I will revive the songs from
“Hair” – “Good Morning Star Shine” and “Let the Sunshine In.” I know I will keep on singing as I
continue taking the “A” train and know that “This Train is Bound for Glory. “
Amen.
Dear Dr.Tullos,
ReplyDeleteMay we all be so blessed to realize our thirsts and then have the courage and passion to quench it.
Miss your posts!!!
anita