always !
A hot time in the old town
tonight (or: rebels without a cause)
Amherst residents may consider themselves the nec
plus altra of cultural sophistication and political
morality, but the fact remains that this is in many
ways a typical provincial town.
Face it, we're not exactly leading "la vida loca"
(or, as we used to say in the 19th century, in what
passed for multiculturalism back then, "la vie
bohême").
Witness these highlights from the police blotter of
the authoritative Amherst Bulletin. Just the
facts, Ma'am:
First,
an item from the recent past, in order to establish
a fitting tone:
Monday, 18 September 2000
"Suspicious
activity 9:19 a.m. An East Pleasant Street resident
told police that a man has been using his yard as a
bathroom."
As in many of these cases, the dedicated journalist
was so intent on conveying the dramatic news to the
public that he sacrificed clarity of meaning for punctuality.
Because the pronoun's antecedent is unclear, we cannot
tell whose yard the man was using "as a bathroom"presumably
a euphemism, but in this town, and with this sort of
writing, who can tell?
Put
down that doughnut, clear off your desk and dig out
that manual of style!
And,
so as to show that the élite town of Amherst
does not have a monopoly on excitement, a sample from
the good town of Hadley:
"Police said a person contacted them Sept.
25 [2000] at 12:41 p.m. to check a car for the presence
of a chemical agent and radioactivity. Police found
nothing out of the ordinary during an investigation."
No
doubt someone made a bundle in the betting pool when
that result was revealed.
The caller in the preceding story was obviously deranged
and nervous. The following one, by contrast, was evidently
of a much more sanguine disposition:
"Police said they received a call from a Mount
Warner Road resident Sept. 28 [2000] at 1:28 p.m. that
a hand grenade had been found the previous week."
A sensible reader would of course ask: Why in the world
did the person wait a week before turning in such a
dangerous object? After all, if you've already had the
thing for a week, why not just hang onto it? Was it
past its expiration date??
Then
again, even the hardened criminal element in Hadley
seems to be pretty laid-back:
"A man has been charged with breaking and entering
in the nighttime after he was found asleep in the home
he broke into, police said.
"[NN], 20, of Gray Street, was arrested Sept. 30
[2000] at 2:02 a.m. on the second floor of a Taylor
Street home, police said.
"The homeowner called police when she found [him]
inside her house."
Sunday,
30 December 2001
Suspicious
activity 1:29 a.m. Police determined that two people
leaving Video to Go after it had closed were just a
manager and an employee.
Disturbances
6:19 p.m. Police calmed down Glendale Road girls who
were out of control.
Saturday, 29 December 2001
Suspicious
activity 4:54 p.m. A man crawling in the middle of Main
Street who was nearly hit by a passing vehicle was gone
when police got there.
(The report of course makes it sound as if we wish the
man had crawled more slowly or been hit [or both] so
that police could have found him.
Indeed, many reports describe situations that no longer
obtain by the time police arrive on the scene, thereby
lending an air of mystery [or futility] to the tale.
JW)
Friday, 28 December 2001
Suspicious
Activity 10:20 p.m. Gun shots in the area of Mill Valley
Estates were quiet when police got there.
(This illiterate and illogical locution
seems to be a favorite of the newspaper whenever reports
of noise are involved. The sound of gun shots does not
endure for more than a moment. What the journalist obviously
means is that the shooting had ceased. It should not
be terribly difficult to say what one means. This is
local journalism, after all, not philosophy.JW)
Thursday, 27 December 2001
Vandalism
2:20 p.m. A garage door at an East Pleasant Street home
was damaged when someone hit it with an orange.
Thursday, 20 December 2001
Suspicious
Activity 8:05 a.m. Police received a report that a man
entered Starbucks, showed a pocket knife[,] and then
asked an employee, 'I wonder if you've been naughty
or nice?' before fleeing the store.
Noise
Complaints 3:09 a.m. Neighbors called police to complain
about loud noise at a Belchertown Road residence. Police
determined that books had just fallen from a shelf.
Wednesday, 19 December 2001
Animal
Complaints 2:53 p.m. A cow loose in the middle of Meadow
Street was put back in its pen. Four hours later, the
cow, which had been tranquilized by its owner, got loose
again and was wandering on North Pleasant Street.
Monday, 17 December 2001
Suspicious
Activity 1:47 p.m. A man allegedly left obscene materials
in the area of the Amtrak station. Police determined
that the materials were just clippings from the Valley
Advocate.
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