The campus itself already existed--founded in 1923 as "Texas Technological College," a place where the sons of ranchers and, eventually, oilmen could get a college education and help manage the family's business upon graduation--but it was 2 miles west of town through cotton fields: "Broadway" and "Main" streets were beautiful bricked thoroughfares with streetcars, but there was fuckin' nothing out there but the college.

The oldest "university neighborhood," which began to be built in the '30s as the College and air force base began to gear up for the European conflict that war profiteers, anyway, saw coming, was directly east of campus, and still has beautiful old houses--mostly now sadly decrepit, because, as is typical in underzoned college towns, it was allowed to devolve into a student- and crack-house neighborhood by greedy slumlords. The next oldest university neighborhood, and the one where Dharmonia and live, is still a student, professor, and medical-faculty neighborhood, directly south of campus.
It's mostly a viable mix, though Lubbock neighborhoods' quality is very much block-by-block, and even house by house. And you're always vulnerable to the depredations of spoiled punk-ass kids from Houston or Dallas whose parents have bought them houses to trash while they "go" to school. But Dharmonia and I have lived in student towns or neighborhoods since at least 1984, so we're somewhat attuned to the synthesis of confrontation, disregard, and surrogate - parenting - to - compensate - for - previously - negligent - and/or - distant - parents such situations can call for (favorite moment from the other night's visit by EMT's to the spoiled rich boys next door: the Lubbock cop who, having kicked in the bathroom door in order to rescue some scared little bunny who thought she was, quote, "OD'ing on marijuana (?!?)," unquote, told us "Don't ever hesitate to call LPD. I'm the door-kickin'est SOB you ever saw").
And, the architecture in this neighborhood is pretty nice. We love our little house, a region-inappropriate Cape Cod bungalow which, being New Englanders, we actually know what color to paint. But we were also sobered to discover, upon closing, that the original platte of the land that broke it into housing lots in 1936 forbade selling to "Negroes or Mexicans"--and so we go out of our way to manifest as many different goals and behavioral models as possible to cause those crusty old ranchin'-and-awl fuckers to spin in their graves.And the block of (overpriced, price-gouged-by-greedy-landlord) shops where the Office is located, in addition to the interesting history about which I've blogged in previous entries, also has some wonderful, region- and period-appropriate plaster, design, and paint. This is the ve3iw just outside the Office, of the tower over the shops, with the name of the old art-house theatre which the coffeeshop building originally housed.
To work.
----------------
Now playing: Sajjad Ali - Jhullay Lal

Good post. But I really believe they are more than just punk-ass kids. There are some decent people in there -- they either have chosen bad models or they rejected the models they had and therefore don't have any model at all, which usually causes a lot of free-floating beer-inhalation. My experience with a number of the young people I've met in the Rock History class suggests to me that a lot of these kids are really lost. They've been taught that the only acceptable goal is to get a job that will make them 6 figures, and they've been given a whole bunch of toys to reinforce the desirability of that goal, but they don't know what to do with either their hearts or the inside of their heads.
ReplyDeleteThe other thing they need, which I don't think they ever get, is approval for the right things. They tend to get ignored when they act like humans, discouraged when they show some sensitivity, and yelled at and threatened when they behave badly, which then becomes increasingly frequent. I myself have been guiIty of this - I didn't go over there at any point when they were behaving like good citizens and say "Gee, your yard looks great since you cleaned it up. Thanks for being quiet lately." So I am inadvertently adding to this syndrome. I often wish I could actually get to know them a little bit, to find out what's actually inside the brain (and the heart.)