By the time my sophomore year hit, I was already bored shitless of academe. Who the hell goes to college just to study all the time and get a degree anyway? I thought, "not me, that's for sure!" I needed sow my wild oats a bit and let my Tony Danza-style hair down a little more. Live a little. Maybe push the envelope and shake stuff up a bit to see just how far I could push things without quite going over the edge and getting thrown out...actually WTF! Why the hell not go over the edge?! You only live once, right?
In this photo: Me circa 1985
So the plan for mayhem was put into effect full force:





What I was thinking on this one, I still ask myself to this day.


went together, but it worked.


space to expand our business ventures. Check. It was the Satanic Strawberry Yoo-Hoo Cult Ritual we performed
outside their door at 3:00 in the morning during the school week which finally did the trick.


would make Howard Stern seem conservative for back in that day. Check.
Only the last one, believe it or not, was the thing that really put it all over the top. My partner in crime and I wanted to create an effect to get us noticed, and it worked. We didn't set out to become public enemies number one and two, but if they could have plastered our likenesses on every public wall and tree of that campus, they would have. The show was a completely crazed, stream of consciousness format. We did totally improvisational bits, had guests in studio, took calls, and pretty much violated every known law the FCC had in effect back then since all there was at that time was terrestrial AM/FM radio. We were either universally loved or hated (not to mention known) by about 5000 students, administration, and faculty. In the end, something had to be done about us. I was spending weekly time in either the dean's office, and then soon afterward, the university president's office. I'm not quite sure, but I don't think any student was ever summoned to his chambers a la "The Social Network". The only difference being when the president walked into his office to meet me, he found me in my Jams Hawaiian shorts and clashing Hawaiian shirt and dark Blues Brothers sunglasses sitting behind his desk with my feet up. I don't think I need to tell you how the conversation/ultimatum went from there. Needless to say he was a bit peeved and wanted to make an example of me and my roommate. Screw "double-secret probation", he went for the gusto. He brought us up on charges of violating the university's human rights policy. I checked my student handbook. Yup, as I suspected. It was as bad as it sounded. Definitely something to be terminally expelled over if so convicted at a judicial board trial which was soon to convene. We were getting screwed, and fast...and to make matters worse, the bastard booted us from our radio show. Now I was really getting upset. So channeling my inner Daffy Duck, I thought to myself, "Of course you know this means war!"

Next came the media frenzy. It didn't take long before they descended on the campus like a swarm of angry hornets. After all, two poor, young kids just trying to get an education and a fair shake like everyone else were having their First Amendment rights infringed upon...and in a supposedly liberal arts environment. Well, at least that's how I spun it.


So for over four long hours, perhaps more, the hearing went on. We stopped recording on our boom box after we went through the four, 60 minute TDK cassette tapes that we had brought along with us to memorialize the proceedings. We just sat through what amounted to parading every single person that we had ever offended in some way in the faculty, administration, and student body stepping up to the podium with a prepared statement to lambaste us in some way for all of our shenanigans. So it was like a personal invitation to show up to our stoning with your best rock, and take a shot. It was classic stuff. We ate it up, and they couldn't figure out why. I just wish those tapes weren't confiscated by the administration before we stepped foot out of the room. They would have made for some great entertainment all these years later. Too bad that the administrative building and hall of records where our student files and these tapes were supposedly kept, mysteriously burned to the ground about 10 years later. Now, now...we had an alibi, and we were a lot of things, but not arsonists.

But we knew all too well how this had to turn out, and we were right.
We were in the end given what amounted to a slap on the wrist. A written reprimand that went into our permanent record (now toast, see preceding). We were found guilty (go figure), but we were not expelled, and also given a second chance now that we had seen and heard the error of our ways. The university was spared a potential huge, black eye and a firestorm of controversy involving the First Amendment of the US Constitution. They had no intention of fighting that legal and public relations nightmare. So after the media, the students, the faculty, the administration, and oh yeah, our parents calmed down, we were able to resume our [cough] studies, which we eventually got around to. We even got our radio show back, and toned it down a bit in line with the "politically correct" movement that was taking hold in society. The days of Andrew Dice Clay, Morton Downey, Jr., and the like were coming to an end. The funny thing is we branched out into publishing on campus to what amounted to our own version of a National Lampoon and Mad Magazine when radio just wasn't enough. This publication in and of itself caused it's own furor in the months that followed, but by the time the next year rolled around, I think they just gave up on fighting us. The dean, the university president, and a couple of others of the prominent administration either retired or took other positions after the scandal. It was rumored that was under pressure from the board of trustees for the inept and incompetent manner that the whole fiasco went down, but no one knew for sure. We were able to break in the new dean and university president just fine so there weren't any further problems.


All in all, it was a blast, and a learning experience of a lifetime. I have a hundred stories of this type that you just cannot make up, and enough material for a full length feature film and a sequel someday. I share this with all of you so you understand how my MTM skills may have developed. Of course I have since become a mature, responsible adult, law abiding citizen, loving and dedicated father of two boys, and a fantasy baseball fanatic to boot. Okay, forget about the mature and responsible crap, but other stuff is true.

Right about now, Principal Ambrosius and Vice Principal Kessenich are shaking their heads wondering why the f@#$ they just didn't get rid of me while they had the chance.


-MTM