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The Television Antenna Bet
by Don Drewniak

Two weeks to the day following the four-game sweep of the Cleveland Indians by the New Yotk Giants in the 1954 World Series, my parents and I made the move to our new Birch Street home in Fall River, Massachusetts.

Working evenings and weekends, my father did everything by himself except for the pouring of cement for the foundation. This included the illegal electrical wiring and plumbing. City inspectors were paid off with a bottle of whiskey each. Times were different back then.

I was halfway from age eleven to age twelve, and big enough to help the Old Man move the heavy stuff. The only two pieces presenting problems were the sofa and the refrigerator. We had to negotiate two right-hand turns to get them out of the soon to be deserted Tuttle Street tenement.

He uttered a few choice Polish curses as we lugged them out. I believe he was somewhat surprised when I laughed as he probably was unaware of my mastery of Polish swear words. He would have been even more surprised if he knew the extent of my knowledge of such words and phrases in three other languages: English, Portuguese and Ukrainian.

Getting the sofa into the new home was a breeze as it was a straight, one-door shot into the living room. Equally easy was the refrigerator. It was relatively small and although we had to pass through two doorways, that proved to be no problem. The first door brought us into a large breezeway. The second led directly into the kitchen. Using his company truck, we were finished by noon. My mother was left with the task of packing, unpacking and putting away the small stuff.

The one downside to the new home was its size. At that time, there were only five usable rooms, two bedrooms, a kitchen, living room and bathroom. A sixth, a sunroom, jutted out from the Mount Hope Bay side of the house and included a homemade fireplace. It was finished on the outside, but not on the inside, and was therefore temporarily used for storage.

My bedroom had one window facing Mount Hope Bay and a second facing the backyard, as well as a wooded area beyond it. The furniture included a twin bed, three-drawer dresser, nightstand and roll-top desk. There was also an alien piece, my parents' desk.

The old apartment included a dining room. Everything from it went into storage in the sunroom. My Tuttle Street bedroom did not have a closet. Not only did I now have my own closet, it was big enough for everything I owned except for my bike and sled.

There was also a ladder tacked to one of the closet walls that led to a four-foot-square opening to the attic. The crest of the attic was barely high enough to allow me to stand without having to stoop. That ended with an eighth-grade growth spurt. Once the dust settled, the Old Man built a storage shed in the backyard.

Three weeks into our Birch Street stay, I filibustered for an outdoor television antenna to replace the ancient rabbit ears. This was to bring in the Boston stations, channels four and seven. An educational station, WGBH (channel two), was added to the Boston mix the following May. WHDH (channel five), also from Boston, hit the airways in 1957. Bringing in the Boston stations would have necessitated the purchasing of a rotor to switch the direction of the antenna from Providence to Boston and back.

I'll build one in the shop and it won't need a rotor, declared the Old Man.

While I knew he could build and fix just about everything in the universe, I doubted that he could make a working antenna. And even if he did, it would still need a rotor. That I knew he couldn't make.

Wanna bet? I asked.

How much?

Ten dollars, and it has to bring in all four channels. Ten dollars back then was the equivalent of $114 as of this writing. I had to mow twenty lawns to make that amount of money. Bottom line, it was a big deal to me.

We shook hands.

I got him.

He came home two Saturday afternoons later and told me to come out to the truck. What I saw is next to impossible to describe. Resting in the bed of the pickup were two objects like nothing anyone on Earth had ever seen. Made out of aluminum (the Old Man was an excellent aluminum welder), each was four-feet in height and had one-inch wide shafts. Welded to each shaft was an ungodly-looking collection of three-eights inch rods of different sizes ranging from one-to-two feet in length. They stuck out in what looked like random directions from the top of the shafts to the bottom.

I stared at them for the better part of a minute.

What are those things?

Antennas.

I laughed.

Want to make it twenty dollars?

I stopped laughing. The thought entered my mind that he might have been tricky enough to have tested them at the shop. I looked for poles on which they could have been mounted on the roof. There weren't any. I looked at the roof and back at whatever those things were.

Twenty dollars. Twenty dollars.

What else have you got?

He pulled a paper bag out of the cab. Inside was a roll of antenna wire, a toggle switch, two eye hooks, some screws, nuts and bolts.

That's it?

The Old Man had his I know something you don't know look.

Then it hit me. He was planning to hang them in the attic. One for Boston, one for Providence.

No!

I turned down the twenty-dollar offer.

He grabbed one of the antennas, while I wrestled with the other one. Sure enough, into the house and into my bedroom he went. Once in the attic, he screwed the eyehooks into two support beams, each a foot or so from the top of the attic. I noticed that he didn't fully tighten the hooks. He suspended one of the antennas from a hook and in rapid order cut a length of the antenna wire, connected it to the bottom of the antenna using two small bolts and then dropped the antenna wire down the outside of the living room wall above where the TV was located. He also dropped down a second wire alongside the first one. Before doing that, he put a small piece of black tape around the bottom of it.

Since he did all of the electrical wiring in the house, he knew exactly where to drop the wire. It was down to the living room. Like a possessed demon he quickly drilled a hole just above an electrical outlet located behind our Zenith. He pulled apart a coat hanger, put it through the hole and fished for the wires. It took him a few minutes before he was able to pull them through the opening.

Next he attached the toggle to the upper-right corner of the back of the TV and used a short piece of antenna wire to connect the toggle to the television antenna-wire receptor. He then connected the wire that wasn't taped to the toggle.

Turn on the TV and check channels ten and twelve.

Doggone it!.

Both stations were clear. I felt a little queasy and began to feel I had been snookered.

Trying to look confident, I said, Those two stations are so close that we could get them using tin foil.

Make it twenty?

That shut me up once more.

Back in the attic, he carefully removed the first antenna from the hook, tightened the hook and put the antenna back on it. The second antenna was hooked up in less than two minutes.

Down the ladder we went. After attaching the second wire to the toggle, he flipped the switch and said, Check your channels.

There was a glimmer of hope as channel four (WBZ - NBC) was visible behind a light amount of snow. Seven (WNAC CBS) was blanketed with a moderate amount of snow and was viewable, but barely.

Go into the cellar and get a flashlight from my workbench.

A flashlight?

There wasn't an indoor stairway to the cellar. I walked through the kitchen, passed through the rear breezeway door and ambled down into the cellar via an outdoor doorway and poured-by-the-Old-Man cement steps.

The workbench was littered with most of the equipment and tools he used in the construction of the house. I grabbed one of the three flashlights on the bench, tested it and brought it with me back to the living room.

I'm going to adjust the antenna. Watch four. Go to the closet when I tell you to. Turn on the flashlight once if it's not clear, twice if it's clear. This was done because of a hearing problem that happened in World War II. In order for him to understand what anyone was saying, they had to speak in a loud voice and be looking directly at him.

Five closet trips later, four was clear. He came back to the living room and turned the channel knob to seven. There was a small amount of snow, but it was quite viewable, especially from a distance. He held out his right hand, palm up. I begrudgingly pulled my wallet out of a pocket and handed him two five's.

He stuffed them into his wallet. And then came the ultimate put-down. He grabbed the rabbit ears and passed them to me. Here, maybe you can sell them and get some of your money back.

What I was thinking at the moment cannot be put into print. In retrospect, however, the Old Man taught me a valuable lesson.