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And the Blackboard Came Tumbling Down
by Don Drewniak

Sam Attar was my eighth-grade math teacher decades ago at the Slade School in Fall River, Massachusetts. He prepared me for high school Algebra I, Geometry, Algebra II and Advanced Algebra. I have always been grateful for that. Nothing shy of a brain transplant could have prepared me for calculus.

He cared about kids and enjoyed interacting with them. Whenever there was a pick-up baseball game on the playground, he would do the pitching.

During the course of the year, he met a small group of us several times for duckpin bowling at the Durfee Bowling Alley on North Main Street in Fall River. He dominated the lanes, often to friendly cries of “Cheater!”

Those were the days before automated pinsetting machines. Instead, the duckpins were picked up manually and reset by human pinsetters, usually teenage boys. In place of machinery occupying the space behind where the pins were placed, there were black barriers made of a mystery material.

Attar was not only tall (6'6"), he was strong. His first roll of every frame was sent down the alley with tremendous velocity. The ball would usually explode through the assembled pins and, more often than not, bounce back off the barrier and knock down some or all of the pins that had been left standing.

No one dared mess with him, so there was virtually no fooling around in his classes. He kept the classes interesting. We learned. The chalkboards (or blackboards as they were then called) were made of black slate and were most likely held in place by glue that was first applied to them when the school was built in 1928. Two separate blackboards covered most of the front wall.

On those rare occasions when the class was not paying attention or getting a little noisy, he would use his right index finger, which resembled a small tree trunk, to pound on one of the front boards. The resulting repetitive booming was the signal to stop whatever crime we were committing.

It was shortly before Easter when it happened. The Big Guy walked over to blackboard closest to the classroom door and pounded it upwards of a dozen times. As he turned to face the class, the board was noticeably vibrating. That was something I hadn’t witnessed in the past.

The last chunk of glue holding the board in place apparently gave up the battle. He glanced back in time to see the top of the board pulling away from the wall, and managed to jump out of the way. Kaboom! As it hit the floor, it broke into dozens, perhaps hundreds, of pieces flying in every direction. Fortunately, no one was hurt.

Following a clinking sound made by the last piece of slate to succumb to Earth’s gravity, there was nothing but silence born of shock. That is, there was nothing but silence until a kid named Harry bellowed from the back of the room, “Wait ’til Mendoza see this, you’re gonna be fired!” Mendoza was the principal.

That did it. Howls of laughter broke out in every corner of the classroom, including from two or three kids who probably laughed for one of the few times in their lives. Attar appeared to be in shock as he stood, eyes wide open, in silence for what had to be one or two minutes. Finally, he returned to the world of the conscious and sent one of the kids to get Mendoza, or Attila the Hun as I liked to call him.

When the Evil One stepped into the room and saw what seemed to be a miniature war zone, he looked as if he wanted to say, “What the hell (or worse) happened?”

Before he could speak, Harry yelled out, “It just fell out of the wall. Mr. Attar was really lucky he wasn’t seriously hurt.” No one else said a word; however, most of us nodded our heads in agreement.

“Are you okay, Sam?” asked Mendoza.

I could tell that the Big Guy was wrestling over whether or not he should correct Harry’s version. In the end, he simply said, “Yes.” And that is the way it was.