"Eddings, David - Regina's Song V2.0" - читать интересную книгу автора (Eddings David) have machines that do the sorting, pulling, and
stacking, but the sawmill where I worked that summer hadn't changed very much since the I920s, so we did things the old-fashioned way. I didn't like the job very much, but I really, really wanted my own car, so I stuck it out. I'd been an indifferent student at best up until then, but after the summer of '86, my attitude changed. There might just be a doctoral dissertation in psychology there-The Motivational Impact of the Green Chain maybe. I became a much more serious student after that summer, let me tell you. Pulling chain did earn me enough money to buy my own car, of course, and that's very important to red-blooded sixteen-year- olds, since it's widely known in that group that "You ain't nothin' if you ain't got wheels." The Twinkie Twins weren't very impressed by my not-very- shiny black '74 Dodge, but I didn't buy it to impress them. They were and by definition unworthy of my attention. They were blond, still chubby with the remnants of baby fat, and they were at the tomboy stage of development. Time rushed on in the endless noon of my adolescence, and it seemed that before I'd turned around twice, graduation day was staring me in the face. The gloomy prospect of pulling chain loomed in front of me, but good old Les Greenleaf stepped in at that point. I'm sure there was a certain amount of collusion involved when right after my high-school graduation an opening "just happened" to show up at the door factory, and my dad presented me with my reactivated union card. The Monday after graduation I went to work at Greenleaf Sash and Door. I was now a worker. I even went to union meetings. I think the highlight of my first year at the door factory came on the day when all the kids in Everett had to go back to school, but I didn't. My delight lasted for almost a whole week. Then it gradually dawned on me that I actually missed going to school. That green-chain scare in the summer of my sophomore year had turned me |
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