I went to wash up, my hands are shaking, blood is leaking out of my gums--I've got a weak place in my gums-- and my eye hurt. After I calmed
down I went back into the bar and swaggered up to the bartender: "Black and White, water on the side," I said. I figured it would calm my nerves.
I didn't
realize it, but the guy I socked in the men's room was over in another part of the bar, talking with three other guys. Soon these three guys-
-big, tough guys--came over to where I was sitting and leaned over me. They looked down threateningly, and said, "What's the idea of pickin' a fight
with our friend?"
Well I'm so dumb I don't realize I'm being intimidated; all I know is right and wrong. I simply whip around and snap at them, "Why don't ya find
out who started what first, before ya start makin' trouble?"
The big guys were so taken aback by the fact that their intimidation didn't work that they backed away and left .
After a while one of the guys came back and said to me, "You're right, Curly's always doin' that. He's always gettin' into fights and askin' us to
straighten it out."
"You're damn tootin' I'm right!" I said, and the guy sat down next to me.
Curly and the other two fellas came over and sat
down on the other side of me, two seats away. Curly said something about my eye not looking
too good, and I said his didn't look to be in the best of shape either.
I continue talking tough, because I figure that's the way a real man is supposed to act in a bar.
The situation's getting tighter and tighter, and people in the bar are worrying about what's going to happen. The bartender says, "No fighting in
here, boys! Calm down!"
Curly hisses, "That's OK; we'll get 'im when he goes Out."
Then a genius comes by. Every field has its first-rate experts. This fella comes over to me and says, "Hey, Dan! I didn't know you were in town!
It's good to see you!"
Then he says to Curly, "Say, Paul! I'd like you to meet a good friend of mine, Dan, here. I think you two guys would like each other. Why don't
you shake?"
We shake hands. Curly says, "Uh, pleased to meet you."
Then the genius leans over to me and very quietly whispers, "Now get out of here fast!"
"But they said they would . . ."
"Just go!" he says.
I got my coat and went out quickly. I walked along near the walls of the buildings, in case they went looking for me. Nobody came out, and I
went to my hotel. It happened to be
the night of the last lecture, so I never went back to the Alibi Room, at least for a few years.
(I did go back to the Alibi Room about ten years later, and it was all different. It wasn't nice and polished like it was before; it was sleazy and had
seedy-looking people in it. I talked t o the bartender, who was a different man, and told him about the old days. "Oh, yes!" he said. "This was the bar
where all the bookmakers and their girls used to hang out." I understood then why there were so many friendly and elegant-looking people there, and
why the phones were ringing all the time.)
The next morning, when I got up and looked in the mirror, I discovered that a black eye takes a few hours to develop fully. When I got back to
Ithaca
that day, I went to deliver some stuff over to the dean's office. A professor of philosophy saw my black eye and exclaimed, "Oh, Mr. Feynman!
Don't tell me you got that walking into a door?"
"Not at all," I said. "I got it in a fight in the men's room of a bar in Buffalo."
"Ha, ha, ha!" he laughed.
Then there was the problem of giving the lecture to my regular class. I walked into the lecture hall with my head down, studying my notes. When
I was ready to start, I lifted my head and looked straight at them, and said what I always said before I began my lecture-but this time, in a tougher
tone of voice: "Any questions?"