Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Trashball 032807: Caribbean Cruise, 1968


Bored-looking white folk in background.
Recovered in Laurel, MD.

Trashball 032807: 1953


The dollar, it seems, used to go pretty far, as these two 1953 receipts bear out. "Charms 3 Boxes" for a mere $1.78 at the People's Drug Store and a full month of newspapers—delivered, no less—for the trifling sum of $1.40.

Recovered in Washington, DC.

Monday, March 26, 2007

Trashball 032607: Baby Boy


Recovered in Laurel, MD.

Trashball 032607: Breaking News, 1981


Four snapshots someone took of their TV screen. The images are pretty familiar, especially to me since I drive past that wall in the background all the time. It's the T Street entrance of the Washington Hilton, site of John Hinckley's assassination attempt on Ronald Reagan.

Why didn't the picture-taker just use YouTube? Oh, right...

Recovered in Laurel, MD.

Sunday, March 25, 2007

Unpleasant Memory No. 23: Auto-Micturition


The street I grew up on, well, it wasn't really a street. It was a boulevard. By the age of 11 or so I had come to realize that "boulevard" had a certain cachet, a kind of European flair, that "street" lacked.
And, indeed, it was no ordinary street; down the middle of Springbrook Boulevard, in Dayton, Ohio, ran the eponymous brook, a quietly burbling little stream through which my friends and I would wade, upsetting rocks and catching crawdads. (In case you're confused, the brook did not literally run down the middle of the street; the roadway was a long oval bisected by a strip of grass and trees, through which the creek ran.)
Unusual people lived along my part of the boulevard. Everyone's neighbors are strange or funny or mysterious to a degree, but my little stretch seemed particularly endowed with odd birds.
Across the street lived the twins, Holly and Heidi, and their mother, whose obsession with Elvis was unsettling.
Down from them lived Mrs. Hough and her son. Mrs. Hough could be relied upon for two things: Little Debbie oatmeal-creme cookies, if you knocked and asked nicely; and, every so often--but without fail--she would back her car out of her driveway, forget to turn the steering wheel, go down the embankment, and into the creek.
Directly next door to my house was Mr. and Mrs. Stover, a nice elderly couple who had a little vegetable garden that was always set upon by rabbits, no matter their efforts to keep them out. Mrs. Stover will never be forgotten for her unabashed snooping; it was highly unusual to be out in the driveway and not find her peering through the blinds, staring fixedly at you. You could make eye contact with her and her gaze would not waver nor her blank expression change.
Anyhow, one day, around 8 or 9 years of age, I was playing with the twins in the creek. It was summer, one of those elemental summer days that seem, when looking back as an adult, to be made of green leaves, blue sky, fluffy white clouds, yellow sun.
I suppose we were looking for crawdads (crayfish, to some of you). We may have been digging up the occasional car part, too; every so often you'd come across a side mirror or bit of tail-light from one of Mrs. Hough's depth-perception errors.
It was getting close to dinnertime. I knew I'd soon have to go in, but I really didn't want to. I wanted to stay out there, feeling my bare feet on the slippery, moss-covered rocks and teasing the twins, whose sole similarity to each other was that they both lisped.
For some time, though, I had really had to pee. But I didn't want to run into my house, worried that my parents would induce me to stay in. I didn't want to go into Holly and Heidi's place, either, because I found their mother rather terrifying, with her enormous hair and makeup so heavy that it seemed to make her face sag. Plus, I knew she'd want to show me some of her latest Elvis kitsch.
The situation was getting truly desperate though. I was at the point where I had to pee so bad that I got that strange tingly feeling in my molars; where I was unconsciously reaching down and squeezing the end of my ding-a-ling to hold it in; where I could think of nothing but peeing; and where, moreover, I was surrounded by the sound of running water.
I could take it no more. I quickly hopped and jumped over to where a tree grew out of the bank, hoping it would provide adequate cover from the girls, and further hoping that they hadn't noticed my distress. I was wearing shorts with an elastic waist. As I started to pull the front down, I furtively looked over to make sure I was unseen; at the same time as I pulled the front of my shorts down with my right hand, I was grabbing onto my dilly-ho-ho with my left hand. Something went wrong.
I immediately started peeing all over myself, starting with my face and, more specifically, my nostrils and eyes. So overcome had I been with joy at the prospect of imminent relief that my bladder had preceded my having fully gotten my wee willy winky out and pointed safely away from my body.
Shocked by the sting of urine in my eyes and, believe it or not, my sinuses, I started falling backward, and made quite a splash in every sense of the word. I never fell completely down, but my ruckus had attracted the attention of Heidi and Holly, who stood transfixed as I wrestled with myself, for the flow continued unabated and I still had not fully released my petit jesu from my shorts.
After several hours of this, it finally stopped. The twins, naturally, were howling with laughter. Mrs. Stover had probably gotten an eye-full, too (although not in the same way I had). I clambered up the bank, utterly humiliated and now quite ready to go in. I managed to get inside the house without my parents seeing me and asking me embarrassing questions I did not wish to answer.

NPR Interview


Liane Hansen, host of Weekend Edition Sunday on NPR, heard about Trashball and was nice enough to do a short piece about it today on her show. You can listen to it here.

Trashball 032507: South Dakota Knights Templar—They Run the World


Recovered from a circa 1895 steamer trunk, these cards identify the bearer as a Knight Templar and Royal Arch Mason in good standing with the Chamberlain, South Dakota, Chapter No. 32. This chapter, as is commonly known, was among the most feared in Brule County, and is thought to have played the chief role in instigating the infamous Barley Riots that took place in Chamberlain on May 12, 1923, from 4:45 pm to 5:02 pm. Only a loud and impatient whistle from a passing constable brought the situation under control.

Trashball 032407: Close Call


This tag came from the seatbottom of one of three fairly unremarkable-looking chairs that I was prepared to take to the dump. Fortunately, my friend Bill indentified the chairs as desirable bent-plywood Thonet chairs from the 1950s, and they'll be auctioned soon. I love the old Maryland Department of Health stamp that was applied to the tag.

Friday, March 23, 2007

Trashball 032307: Poetaster II


A terrible bit of blank verse written on the back of a pink "While You Were Out" slip (incidentally, do they even make those anymore in the age of voicemail?). Given that it is signed "Love always, Michael", it's pretty hilarious that he clearly was confused on the spelling of the name of the unfortunate girl he wrote it for. Here now, is the poem:


A vision
comes
with peace
through thought
from the third eye
out the mouth
to my ears
and pushes me
further
towards
Nirvana.


Yechh. The large indent before "Nirvana" really grates. Michael strikes me as the earnest type of sensitive fellow who date-rapes passed out girls at Phish concerts.

Don't remember where I found this.

Trashball 032307: Entitles the Bearer to Be Lame


This is a lame-ass hall pass. It's a product, I think, of the namby-pamby modern practice of treating all children as "winners". Why else would this bathroom pass imply that the bearer is a "star" and be garnished with crappy celebratory graphics? In my day (did I really just write that?), a bathroom pass was a chalkboard-eraser-sized block of wood with the word "PASS" written on it in magic marker. And it got the job done.

Recovered in the LeDroit Park neighborhood of Washington, DC.

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Trashball 032207: That's a Good Boy, or Release the Hounds


The last thing the shutterbug saw before being torn to shreds? Really terrific old snapshot recovered from a shoebox in Mt. Rainier, MD. I worry for the photographer/intruder. Hope she got rabies shots just to be safe.

Trashball Apparel




Yes, Trashball is hard. It's labor intensive and each little ball only nets me 25 of your Earth cents. That's why I invite you to help support Trashball by checking out my t-shirts and other novelties. Some shirts, like those above, feature bits of Trashball ephemera. Others feature my art (www.goodwinart.com) and politics.

Wednesday, March 21, 2007

Trashball 032107: This Little Piggy Went to the Crusher


Recovered from circa 1970 toy chest in Gaithersburg, MD. Gave me a bit of a scare at first.

Trashball 032107: Kiwanis Club, 1926, and the Odor Lingers On


Here's the nearly all-male Kiwanis Club of Greencastle, Indiana, in 1926. I have a hunch that the gentleman I point to is about to break wind (click on the image for a closer view). He's just got that look about him.

Trashball 032107: Econobox


Many of the beaten-up toy cars I recently recovered from an old toy chest in Gaithersburg, Maryland, retain some value to collectors, but not this one.

Trashball 032107: Please Call Them "Little People"


Half-inch laborer recovered from circa 1970 toy chest in Gaithersburg, MD.

Lil' Ole' Trashball Gets the Washington Post Treatment

Click here to read the article.