Writers' Community!
Home Page Two Columnists Submit an Article FAQs Contact Author Login
Article Submission
We Need YOUR Articles!
We'll Promote Them for FREE!

Author Login

New Authors
Register Here


Now Serving 5,561 Authors
50,541 Quality Articles
& 3,403 Current Users Online!
Featured Authors
Dave Potchak is a fan of:
Susan Thom (9,047)
Bruce Horst (918)
David Tanguay (7,911)
Kathy Somers Walsh (1,776)
Avis Ward (11,454)
Arlene Pellicane (1,298)
Kay Elizabeth (1,711)
Cheryl Moeller (204)
Kimberly (612)
Most Recent
Some Quips, Quotes and Really Bad Jokes

More Searchwarp Lookalikes - Is Bill Clinton Demi Moore or Tom Hanks You?

Forget Christmas

A Little Comic Relief

White Guilt Is Dead

Silent Night, My Sweet Rooster!

The Ugly Christmas Tree Story and Other Yuletide Remembrances

Bear Trap

Help Peter Pan aka Randy Constan I'm a Lost Boy!

The UFO that came to Thanksgiving.

Home » Categories » Entertainment » Humor » The Great Train Ride of '71 » Printer Friendly

Dave Potchak

The Great Train Ride of '71

Rated 4 out of 5
No Reader Ratings Available ?
Rate It  /  View Comments  /  View All Articles submitted by Dave Potchak
Submitted Wednesday, July 27, 2005
Dave Potchak (668)
Dave Potchak

PO's Peek / Eggnoggin
Log in to become a member of Dave Potchak's Fan Club!


                                                  THE GREAT TRAIN RIDE OF  ‘71

 

The following story appeared in VISTA, the Shippensburg University's Alumni Magazine.  It was originally printed in 1996, for an anniversary edition.  Absolutely no names were changed to protect anyone and as always, every bit of it is true.

 

It was in the spring of my freshman year at the Ship (1971) and a group of us in Old Main (a men’s dorm at the time) decided to hop the freight train as it went through the lower part of the campus.  We had heard great tales of students taking train rides but really didn’t know of anyone who actually did it.  So, after lunch, an a Friday afternoon in April (yes, we cut our Friday afternoon classes) Jeff Nagy (’73), Tom O’Leary, Gene Lakin (’73) and I jumped on a moving train as it slowed to enter the campus and town of Shippensburg.  I’ll never forget the cheers from the gang on the fourth floor of Old Main as all four of us made it safely aboard.

 

The train was hauling new automobiles destined for a dealer in Winston-Salem, North Carolina.  And as fate would have it, the doors to a brand new Chevrolet Monte Carlo were left unlocked, so we jumped in.  In the glove compartment we found the keys to the other cars on our section of the train, so we had a choice as to what car we traveled in.  We decided that the Monte Carlo would be fine, so we got comfy and relaxed on real leather seats. 

 

What an experience!  When we got a little chilly, we started the engine and ran the heater for a few minutes.  There we were listening to the radio, eating cereal left over from breakfast from Kriner Diner and having the adventure of our lives.    

 

We got a kick out of observing the expressions on the faces of the people as we went through intersections.  A little toot of the horn and a wave from the four of us, and motorists just stared back in amazement. 

 

Once late that night, we hit the headlights on our car and we received a signal in return.  Someone else was aboard another car on the same train on the same night.  We thought that maybe train hopping wasn’t so uncommon after all.

 

Later on in the night we got a shock as we peered out the window.  The ground was pure white.  Our first instinct told us that maybe the train was heading north and that we were in Canada.  But Saturday’s dawn proved that we were in Roanoke, Virginia, where the city just so happened to experience a freak snowstorm in April.

 

After a quick breakfast in Roanoke, we started hitchhiking home on Interstate 81.  I doubt today that four hitchhikers would have much of a chance getting a ride, but in 1971 we had little trouble. 

 

We spent Saturday night in a cheap hotel in West Virginia and a dozen rides later, arrived back on campus Sunday evening.  We didn’t have to cut any Monday classes.

 

I was surprised to learn that quite a few people on campus were aware of our trip.  I remember Anton Slysh, professor of biology, asking me a few questions about it during class on Monday.  He said he learned of the excursion when he over heard a conversation about it in a Shippensburg restaurant that weekend. 

 

My parents, as usual, were the last to hear of that train ride.  I sent them a post card from Roanoke but it didn’t make it home until a couple of weeks later.  They weren’t particularly happy with me but it was all part of one’s education.  At least that’s what I told them. 

 

Years later, as a schoolteacher in the Northern Bedford School District, that infamous train ride was brought to my attention once again.  Some of our college-bound students took a tour of the campus one day.  The tour guide was a Shippensburg student and she told them a story where a train used to go through the campus.  There was a rumor she said,  “that students would hop aboard and go for rides."  Of course, I played ignorant and pretended I knew nothing about it. How could I admit to my students that one of those train-hoppers was their teacher?  I still wonder though, was she referring to the train ride of 1971?    

   

     


 

To comment, email Dave at admin@pos-peek.com or visit www.pos-peek.com  to read other related stories or to submit old photos. 






Reprint Rights

Log in to become a member of Dave Potchak's Fan Club!

Comments on this article:
No comments yet.


Was this article helpful to you? Leave a Public Comment or Question:

 

This Article has been viewed 273 times.
Article added to SearchWarp.com on Wednesday, July 27, 2005
View other articles written by Dave Potchak (668)
Dave Potchak


If you found this article interesting, you may want to check out:

Disclaimer:  All information on this site is provided for informational purposes only! By no means is any information presented herein intended to substitute for the advice provided to you by any health care or other professional or organization.


Today's Most Popular
Some Quips, Quotes and Really Bad Jokes

All True Horoscope - Accurate 365 days a year!

Five Sexual Positions You May Not Have Thought Of

How to Become God in Five Easy Lessons

Bibliophobia: A Better Excuse Than My Dog Ate My Homework!

A True "I Love You" E-Mail

The Chronicles of Foster Foskin’s Adventures in Thailand 14

Facts about Ancient Egypt

In Search of...False Teeth

Anorexia, Pro and Cons

Home  |  Page Two  |  FAQ's  |  Contact  |  Terms of Service  |  Article Submission Guidelines  |  Writers' Contests  |  Privacy  |  Mission / About
Copyright © 1999-2009 SearchWarp.com, All Rights Reserved - SearchWarp.com is an IcoLogic, Inc. Company