Showing posts with label Bob Greene. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bob Greene. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 18, 2020

Turning 76

“Aging is an extraordinary process where you become the person you always should have been,” David Bowie
 Toni gets cookie at Ivy's Bohemia House from Amy Mackiewicz

Toni’s birthday falls on February 14, and we normally celebrate the day after so not to compete with the Valentine’s Day crowd.  Patrick O’Rourke treated me to lunch at Asparagus Restaurant, whose Vietnamese owners are friends of his, to talk about my next interview with him, so I took Toni an order of lobster and mango spring rolls.  We arrived home within minutes of one another, as Dave and Angie had taken her to lunch at Ivy’s Bohemia House.

Next day, granddaughters Alissa and Miranda arrived with Miranda’s boyfriend Will, whom we’d never met. He’s in Nursing administration and going for an MBA.  He’s been working with Spanish-speaking hospital out-patients in Grand Rapids on such matters as ensuring that they have a procedure in place for taking prescriptions at the proper dosages and times. At Toni’s request we dined at Craft House so that she could introduce our Michigan visitors to the beignet pastry fritters served with chocolate, strawberry, and caramel dipping sauces.  Beforehand, we shared an appetizer of Brussel sprout chips tossed with garlic parmesan butter and candied bacon; my entre, BBQ pork shanks, a haystack of onions, and Cole slaw, was delicious.Home in time for the conclusion of Maryland-Michigan State basketball.  Down by seven with minutes to go, the Terrapins scored the final 14 points, including 11 by Anthony Cowan (3 threes and 2 free throws), to beat the Spartans 67-60.



Sunday, I played board games with Dave and Tom Wade, including, at Dave’s request, Stockpile, which I’d only played a couple times but really enjoy, and Space Base, which I’d observed  at Halberstadt Game Weekend.  We said goodbye to our overnight house guests and prepared for a birthday party for Toni, which grew like Topsy, as the expression goes – originally referring to a slave girl in Harriet Beecher Stowe’s “Uncle Tom’s Cabin” (1851) – to 20 people, including four of Becca’s Chesterton classmates.  Dave and Angie picked up Chinese food from Wing Wah and a chocolate cake from Jewel.

At bridge the previous Wednesday I partnered with Vickie Voller, whom I’ve known since she was an IUN student in the 1970s.  She’s an animal lover whose emails contain the quote, “Love is a four-legged word.” We finished above 50 percent.  She’ll be bringing her husband to my Art in Focus talk on Rock and Roll, 1960, and they plan to dance. I’ll start with “Hard-Headed Woman,” on the soundtrack of “King Creole” and Elvis Presley’s last recording before entering the army for two years in March of 1958 and subsequently reaching number 1 on the Billboard Hot 100.

At Hobart Lanes 83-year-old Gene Clifford told me his bowling career was over, doctor’s orders, due to COPT.  In our final game against Fab Four, the Engineers finished with a 1053, 173 pins over our handicap.  Joe Piunti, carrying a 130 average, rolled a 223. I finished with a 160 and 472 series, 30 pins over my average.
Over the weekend the August Wilson play “Fences” (1985) attracted a large audience at IU Northwest.  Directed by IUN alumnus and visiting professor Mark Spencer, it deals with an embittered former Negro League baseball player (Troy Maxson) now working as a garbageman in Pittsburgh and starred Darryl Crockett and Rose Simmons.  James Earl Jones appeared in the original Broadway production and Denzel Washington in a 2010 revival, with Viola Davis as wife Rose Maxson. 

While most high schools were off for President’s Day, both IUN and Valparaiso University held classes, having honored Martin Luther King Day.  My interview with Chancellor Bill Lowe was delayed a few minutes because of a fire alarm in Hawthorn Hall (caused by a faulty toaster, it turned out) that kept Samantha Gauer from getting the videotape equipment.  She thoughtfully alerted the Chancellor and me from her cellphone.  Lowe grew up in Brooklyn; his father was a police officer.  He majored in History at Michigan State and was in Ireland doing research during a time of civil rights demonstrations that became known as the Troubles. His administrative career took him to the Rust Belt cities of Cleveland, Chicago, Detroit, Minneapolis, and ultimately, Gary.
 confiscating bootleggers equipment in Gary (1926)

Invited to speak in Nicole Anslover’s class about Prohibition in Gary, I described the city in 1920 as containing 50,000 residents, mostly steelworkers, many foreign-born and often single men laboring 12 hours a day, seven days a week.  The year began with Gary under martial law occupied by army troops ordered to crush a two-month-old strike and jail union leaders whom General Leonard Wood branded as Reds.  Prohibition was anathema to men for whom the saloon was the center of their limited social life, where they drink, ate, and, in may cases, procured establishments that refused to pay off corrupt police officials.  At the Gary Country Club, the watering hole of the affluent, liquor flowed freely with no interference from law enforcement.  Some years, due to its reputation as an “anything goes” city, Gary attracted more tourists than Indianapolis, disparaged as “Naptown” or “India-no-town.” By 1930 former mayor R.O. Johnson, convicted in 1923 of violating the Volstead Act and sent to Atlanta federal penitentiary, was back in City Hall as mayor.
 partying at Gary Country Club (1926); Allegra Nesbitt standing, 2nd from right

Students asked me about race-relations in Gary during the Twenties, a time when Mill officials aimed to keep the labor force divided, and whether U.S. Steel built housing for workers as in Pullman, Illinois.  While the corporation provided home ownership opportunities on the Northside for managerial personal and plant foremen, unskilled workers were left to fend for themselves. Many boarded in bunk houses, sharing a cot with someone working the alternate 12-hour shifts. Nicole invited me back anytime; I thinking of returning in two weeks when the class discusses the 1925 Scopes Monkey Trial featuring Clarence Darrow for the defense and William Jennings Bryan for the prosecution.
Bob Greene (above), author of “When We Get to Surf City,” emailed:
     What a nice letter, Jim-- thank you.
    I really liked the excerpts from the book that you chose to include in your blog-- I'm especially glad that you took note of my observations about Jerry Lee Lewis.  No one has ever specifically mentioned that part of the book to me, but it's one of my favorites, and I'm pleased that you saw in it what I did.
    Just sang again the other night in Florida with a band called California Surf Incorporated-- all former Beach Boys musicians.  Randell Kirsch, from Jan and Dean, was playing with them, and one of the guitarists wasn't feeling well and didn't want to do his vocals, so they invited me to fill in.  It never gets less fun.
    Thank you again for what you said, and especially for the way you said it.  It means a lot to me.
I wrote back:
    Thanks for the nice response.  I saw Jerry Lee Lewis live in Merrillville, IN in 1980 (what a showman!) and recall him appearing a few years ago on Letterman with Neil Young, the only time Neil agreed to be on the show.
    I’m glad you’re still jamming with old Beach Boys.  My son was in a band until a few years ago and would invite me on stage to sing the chorus of Cheap Trick’s “Surrender.”

Having enjoyed the new Of Monsters and Men CD, I checked out their earlier album “beneath the Skin” (2015) and discovered “Slow Life,” which hardly describes the past hectic days.  One verse goes:
We're slowly sailing away
Behind closed eyes
Where not a single ray of light
Can puncture through the night

With my 60th high school reunion scheduled for October, I told planners Larry Bothe, John Jacobson, and Connie Heard that I’d work on classmates who don’t normally attend. Rehashing weekend highlights with Gaard Logan, a gourmet cook who claims she has no interest in the reunion but is always interested in hearing about Upper Dublin classmates, I described the beignet pastry fritters, Brussel sprout chips, and lobster and mango spring rolls.  Signing off, I called her sweetie, eliciting a chuckle and, “Take care , my friend.”

Saturday, February 8, 2020

State of Disunion

    “I rise today with no small measure of regret, regret because of the state of disunion, regret because of the disrepair and destructiveness of our politics, regret because of the indecency of our discourse.” Senator Jeff Flake (2013-2019), Republican critic of Trump

When I heard that Trump had given the Presidential Medal of Freedom to racist demagogue Rush Limbaugh during the State of the Union presentation, I was glad I’d been playing bridge at the time because I might have done damage to the TV.  Here’s Ray Smock’s take on the fiasco, titled "State of Disunion":
    Last night’s State of the Union address will go down in history as a formalized campaign rally, complete with wild cheers, applause, and chants of “Four More Years“ from the Republicans in the chamber and with silence punctuated by occasional jeers from the Democrats. It had all the elements of President Trump’s demagogic style. It was designed not for the brain, or even the heart, it was a punch in the gut to the president’s political enemies and a prelude to the coming campaign. As such, it will take its place in the annals of such addresses, as a sign of our divided times.
    Rush Limbaugh is the single most controversial broadcaster in the nation, and ranks with past spewers of hatred, conspiracy, and distrust of government, with the first radio demagogue, Father Charles Coughlin, the “Radio Priest” of the 1930s. Coughlin’s broadcasts reached 30 million listeners and featured economic and political attacks on Franklin Roosevelt's administration and the dangers of Jewish bankers. Coughlin was finally kicked off the radio in 1939 for his anti-Semitism and for espousing support for fascists like Hitler and Mussolini.
    To give this high honor to such a polarizing figure as Rush Limbaugh, a man who has been Trump’s mouthpiece in attacking his chief political rival, and to do it before a large television audience in the chamber of the House of Representatives was a sickening display of the Trump notion that if he does it, it’s OK, because he’s the president. Nobody else matters.  At the end of the speech, Speaker Nancy Pelosi made a clear show to her party and the nation that she wanted no part of the lies in the speech, or Trump’s use of the People’s House for his re-election campaign. She deliberately, and with emphasis, showed her disgust for the whole performance by tearing up copies of the president’s speech. The president did not see this at the time. His back was turned as he was leaving the podium. Earlier, the president refused to shake the Speaker's hand, when she offered it.
April Lidinsky posted this reaction: “Weep for our democracy in the hands of such craven people.  And VOTE.”  Alan Gardner emailed Smock: Thank you for the review with an historical perspective that magnifies his shameless, sociopathic behavior. He sullies everything he touches, physically and verbally; and he leaves a proverbial slime trail behind him where ever he walks.”  
 House Speaker Nancy Pelosi tears up State-of-the-Union speech
The following day, George Romney broke with fellow Republicans and voted to convict Trump of abuse of power.  As he himself predicted, the White House propaganda machine is leveling all sorts of insults against him.  Typical is Michael Kelleher’s asinine remark: "RINO scumbag.”  On the other hand, Jim Daubenheyer emailed: “Romney just became my second favorite Republican ever!”  I’m assuming the other was Abraham Lincoln.  Some pundits are calling the 2020 contest the most important since 1860, when Lincoln’s election precipitated Southern states seceding from the Union followed by the Civil War.  I’d compare the situation to 1932 although, unlike FDR’s landslide victory, I’m less confident in the result.  Many people I talk to are beginning to believe that only billionaire Mike Bloomberg can defeat Trump. A few timid Republicans expressed the hope that Trump would think twice before abusing his power again.  He answered by purging those brave enough to testify about his wrong-doing.  Unlike Bill Clinton, he is incapable of acting apologetic.

As always, I enjoyed partnering with Dottie Hart at bridge.  A half-century ago she lived in Gary’s Aetna neighborhood, and her four children attended Wirt High School.  Her house had been boarded up for some time, and, sadly, Wirt now sits vacant.  Several people I knew bought starter homes in Aetna when first finding work in Gary, including Post-Tribune managing editor Terry O’Rourke and Kate and Jim Migoski (a U.S. Steel computer specialist who got me to join the Electrical Engineers bowling team).  I had a 486 series bowling against Pin Short. Two frames in a row I left the 6-10 “baby” split.  After I picked it up the first time, daughter-in-law Delia’s uncles, Larry Ramirez and Eddie Lopez, clapped. Before trying for it again, I turned to them and said, “This will show if last frame was luck or not.”  After I again picked it up, their entire team cheered.  On the adjacent lane, friendly Judy Sheriff, who must be close to 90 and struggles to break 100, came over to tell me a pants cuff was inside my sock and noticed a scratch on my cheek.  “I scratched myself in my sleep; I do it every couple months, not sure why,” I told her.  “Nightmares?” she speculated.  More likely, just an itch.
Eddie Lopez, Larry Ramirez, Angel Menendez, Phil Vera at Hobart Lanes
In “When We Get to Surf City” Bob Greene mentions that the band members backing up Jan and Dean on the Oldies circuit frequently quote lines from the 1996 Tom Hanks movie “That Thing You Do,” about the Wonders, a group from Erie, Pennsylvania, playing in a 1964 Rock and Roll “Galaxy of Stars” caravan.  These include Faye lamenting “I have wasted thousands and thousands of kisses on you,” Dell saying, “Ain’t no way to keep a band together.  Bands come and go.  You got to keep on playing, no matter with who,” and Guy explaining, “It would be ungentlemanly for me to elaborate.”   When the band was performing at the Erie Seafood Festival, shortly before the set began, Greene used this line from “That Thing You Do”: “How did we get here?”  He was not being sarcastic despite the smell of dead fish and vomit wafting toward the stage.  To him it was “one more wondrous summer night.”
below Howard "Hopalong" Cassidy
Before a Jan and Dean concert taking place in Columbus, Ohio, following a minor league baseball game. Greene spotted a first base coach for the hometown Clippers, a New York Yankees affiliate, with No.40 on the back of his uniform – the same number 1955 Heisman Trophy winner Howard “Hopalong” Cassidy wore when he played for Ohio State.  Lo and behold, the coach turned out to be Cassidy himself, whom I had rooted for when he played running back for the Detroit Lions and, briefly, the Philadelphia Eagles.  A longtime friend of Yankees owner George Steinbrenner, Cassidy passed away last September at age 85.  
 
Greg Hildebrand 
Toni and I traveled to South Bend, where Mayor Pete Buttigieg, currently a Democratic Presidential frontrunner, first made a name for himself, for our annual meeting with a TIAA adviser.  Thanks to IUN’s retirement plan that first kicked in for me 50 years ago, we are wealthier now than ever before.  Lake effect snow was coming down hard when we left Chesterton, but before long the sun came out, a rare sight this past week. On wealth management adviser Greg Hildebrand’s shelf were four different colored Legos on top of one another, perhaps a gift from one of his children.

In Jean Shepherd’s “A Fistful of Fig Newtons” I was pleased to find a third chapter dealing with when the author was a kid growing up in the Region, in addition to those on the Great Ice Cream War and Camp Nobba-Wa-Wa-Nockee.  Shepherd described tactics employed by kids sitting near the back of the classroom whose last names appeared near the end of the alphabet to avoid being called on by teachers at Hammond’s Warren G. Harding School. One kid slumped down in his desk, while the author was expert at keeping another kid between him and the teacher’s line of vision.  “I blessed the beehive hairdo when it became popular,” Shepherd wrote, and added:
    Fat Helen Weathers could sweat at will, surrounding herself with a faint haze cloud so that Miss shields could never quite see her in focus, believing that Helen was just a thumb-smudge on her glasses.  Perlmutter had a thin pale beaky face that you could not remember even while you were looking at him.  No teacher ever remembered his name or whether he was even there.  He’d sit for hours without moving a muscle, as anonymous as a pale hat rack.  
    Zyncmeister, a strict Catholic, sat so far behind even us that he spent his entire school career jammed up against the cabinet in the rear of the room where worn erasers, pickled biology specimens, and moldering lunches were stored.  His defense was religion; divine intervention.  The click of his beads as they were counted kept up a steady castanet beat during Miss Shields’s distant cluckings.  It seemed to work.

In Jean Shepherd’s “A Fistful of Fig Newtons” I was pleased to find a third chapter dealing with when the author was a kid growing up in the Region, in addition to those on the Great Ice Cream War and Camp Nobba-Wa-Wa-Nockee.  Shepherd described tactics kids sitting near the back of the classroom whose last names appeared near the end of the alphabet employed to avoid being called on by teachers at Hammond’s Warren G. Harding School. One kid slumped down in his desk, while the author was expert at keeping another kid between him and the teacher’s line of vision.
After eight years the Indiana State Board of Education, which took over Gary Roosevelt High School in 2012, terminated its contract with EdisonLearning.  In an editorial titled “State owes Roosevelt a future,”The Gary Crusader wrote that the for-profit education management company based in Fort Lauderdale earned over $31 million “while Roosevelt would remain with under-achieving students, a crumbling, neglected building, and now an uncertain future,” as a state-controlled management team has recommended that the 89-year-old structure be permanently closed.  Classes have been held elsewhere for over a year.  The Crusader concluded: “We hope the state will eat some humble pie before giving its final decision.  The state owes Roosevelt a future that it promised but failed to deliver.”
I watched IUN’s Lady Redhawks bow to an 18-3 St. Xavier Crusader’s team that was undefeated in conference play.  Several of their players, including Maddie Welter (no.3), were deadly 3-point shooters able to get off their shot lightning fast. Six-foot, four-inch Redhawk Breanna Boles (no. 32) dominated inside whenever teammates got her the ball down low but seemed to prefer tossing up 3-pointers, especially after her first one went in.  I noticed former stars Nicki Monahan and Grayce Roach were now assistants to Coach Ryan Shelton.
Saturday Evening Club met at Valpo Velvet ice cream shoppe, founded in 1947 and a veritable living museum with photos lining the walls and many flavors in large tubs behind the counter. Scott Brown, whose son Mike and daughter-in-law Catherine (above) own the factory and store, spoke on the world’s super rich, who control governments, are modern-day Robber Barons, and have taken to buying up luxury properties in places such as London, New York City, and Florida, and converted them into condominium suites that often remain vacant most of the year.  President Terry Brendel signed me up to speak next September on the topic “Novelists as Social Historians.”

Tuesday, February 4, 2020

Longevity

“The most important key to longevity is avoiding worry, stress, and tension.” George Burns, “How to Live to be 100”
Bob Hope and George Burns
The first centenarians that come to mind are Rose Kennedy (1890-1995), who outlived three of her four sons, including one killed during World War II and two (JFK and RFK) slain by assassins’ bullets, and comedian George Burns (1896-1996), who was appearing on Late Night shows in his nineties with a cigar, albeit unlit. Fellow comedian Bob Hope (1903-2003) once quipped that the secret to staying young was to hang around with older people.  Painter Grandma Moses (1860-1961) believed the secret to a long life is keeping busy.  Queen Mother Elizabeth (1900-2002) recommended living “as if tomorrow you’ll be run over by a big red bus.” Harry S Truman (1884-1972) claimed the key to longevity is taking a two-mile walk before breakfast. Jimmy Carter, our oldest former president, believed he still had more of God’s word to do on earth.  I have my blog, duties as Calumet Regional Archives co-director, occasional speaking engagements, plus bridge, bowling, and, most of all, family. Upcoming campus talks include “Prohibition in Gary” in Nicole Anslover’s American History class, and “1960: A Critical Year for Rock and Roll Music” for Senior College.

Newest finds at Chesterton library: The Flaming Lips performing “The Soft Bulletin” with Colorado Symphony Orchestra and a new Jimmy Eat World CD, “Survivor,” whose title song contains these lines:
In a lot of ways
You’re still that lost kid
You can still survive
But not exactly live

“Judy Ayers wrote about a “dear old friend” in the Winter 2020 Ayers realtors Newsletter:
    Laura Jones, born 102 years ago on June 30th, 1917, has known me longer than any other person on earth, having been a neighbor of my family since I was born and raised on Hancock Street just two doors away from where Laura lives today.  She was among the first group of students who went to Miller School and grew up with kids from the 8 or 10 houses at that time on Hancock Street. She remembers most of the houses being built. Miller was a full-fledged community at that time with businesses and professional offices. A good way to get to downtown Gary was to take the streetcar that traveled from Lake Street down what we know as Miller Avenue to Broadway. 
    Laura graduated from high school in 1936 but decided to take an extra year of classes in order to be able to work in an office. She remembers at that time women didn’t work outside their homes unless they were teachers or nurses. Because of her extra training, she was hired by a neighbor, Mr. Jackson, who was the head of the Gary office of Railway Express – a national package delivery service that used existing railroad infrastructure to safely and rapidly deliver parcels, money and goods during World War I. The office was located where the New York Central and B & O railways converged in Gary at 3rd and Broadway, and she worked there for 30 years. When the war started and most of the men working at Railway Express had been drafted or had enlisted, Mr. Jackson asked Laura to help people get on and off the train, point them in the right direction, and be the one to accept packages and deliveries. When the US Army took over the operation of Railway Express, she more than once had to convince the Army she was more than capable of doing her job and could actually be quite helpful. She has fabulous stories about animals on their way to Lincoln Park Zoo, traveling nuns, a dead guy in the men’s bathroom, two United States Presidents passing through – all just trying to get from one place to another.
    Laura met her husband, Sam, when he and his father, who owned a movie theater in Gary, set up a program during the war to show second run movies on week nights in local schools – Miller School being one. Sam had graduated from college with a degree in architectural engineering and was working at US Steel when drafted by the army. Because of his education and with further training in the military, he was assigned to a project and that didn’t allow him to give Laura much detail, nor could he tell Laura exactly what his role was and why he was transferred from Alabama to the University of Iowa to New York. Sam called her often, and during one particular call Laura told him she had been listening to the radio the night before and heard about the bombing of Japan. It was then Sam could tell her he had been working on the development of the “A Bomb.” Later he received written recognition for his military contribution.
    The message I get after spending time with Laura is not that her life has been one big, funny, wisdom-packed adventure. She certainly has the effects of physical decline, which she best describes with words not always befitting when spoken by a lady. She has trouble with her hearing aids and her vision is beyond poor. She moves from room to room, yet in her own home with the aid of a walker that should probably be fitted with a governor. Yet she always has a list of things she wants to accomplish – be it clean out a drawer, pay her bills or look forward to the next outing with her more than reliable and dedicated health care giver, Wayne. She delights in telling stories of days gone by, but she always talks about what she hopes to do tomorrow. Maybe the message before my very eyes is that happiness is a choice we make.  We probably shouldn’t worry about what might happen and then just adapt when it does.
“Curb Your Enthusiasm” is back on HBO for a tenth season.  The first several episodes deal humorously (some might say tastelessly) with Larry David being accused of sexually harassing women.  Sadly, Shelley Berman, who played his father Nat, passed away at age 92, and Bob Einstein, whose deadpan expressions were a hoot as Marty Funkhouser, died at age 77.  In a memorable season 4 episode titled “The Survivor,” Larry invites Holocaust survivor Solly (actor Allan Rich, born in 1926) to dinner and he has a heated argument with a guest named Colby who’d been on the reality TV show “Survivor” over how rough each had had it.  Here’s a sample of the dialogue: 
    Colby: So, here we are in a region of Australia where, out of the world's ten most deadly snakes, nine of 'em inhabit this region. It was harrowing. You come across a taipan on the trail, you get bit, you're dead in thirty minutes flat. 
    Solly: Oy, I'll tell you, that's a very interesting story, let me tell you. I was in a concentration camp! You never even suffered one minute in your life compared to what I went through! 
    Colby: Look, I'm saying- I'm saying we spent 42 days trying to survive and we had very little rations, no snacks... 
    Solly: Snacks? What you talking, "snacks"? We didn't eat sometimes for a week! For a month! We ate nothing!...
Toni and I enjoyed the Agatha Christie-inspired whodunnit “Knives Out” with an all-star cast that included Christopher Plummer as an 85-year-old mystery writer, Jamie Lee Curtis as his headstrong daughter, Daniel Craig (most famous for James Bond flicks) as a detective, and Don Johnson of “Miami Vice” fame. Looking for films we both might like, I discovered it was playing at the Cinemark in Valparaiso.  

Super Bowl LIV in Miami did not disappoint, especially the Latin-flavored halftime extravaganza starring Jennifer Lopez (50) and Shakira (43) defying the laws of aging in a high energy performance.  With JLo’s daughter Emme leading a children choir in a scene with children in cages, strands of “Born in the USA” could be heard when JLo unveiled a Puerto Rican flag.  I was pleased that Kansas City prevailed, just their second NFL championship, the first coming 50 years ago coached by Gary native Hank Stram, famous for shouting on the sidelines during Super Bowl IV, “Just keep matriculating the ball down the field boys!”   Kansas City had lost in the first Super Bowl when Gary native Fred “The Hammer” Williamson suffered a broken arm early in the contest.  Andy Reid, who had coached the Philadelphia Eagles for many years before joining the Chiefs, previously had the most victories by someone who had never won a Super Bowl.  Quarterback Patrick Mahomes again rallied his team from a ten-point fourth-quarter deficit on three touchdown drives to seal the 31-20 victory. 
 Super Bowl MVP Patrick Mahomes in Disneyland

Gamblers bet millions on a myriad of Super Bowl scenarios, some as inane as the coin flip  or how long the national anthem would last.  One could wager on whether or not Mahomes would rush for more than 30 yards.  With just a minute remaining, he had gained 44 yards on the ground; running out the clock on the three final plays, he purposely kneeled down 5, 3, and 7 yards behind the line of scrimmage, reducing his total for the game to just 29, costing high rollers big bucks. Several friends posted a Trump tweet congratulating the Chiefs, who, he claimed, “represented the Great State of Kansas so very well.” Of course, the Chiefs play in Kansas City, Missouri.

In one of Barb Walczak’s final Newsletters she profiled bridge newcomer and Miller resident Gosia Caldwell, who owned a business in Poland but came to America 19 years ago to be a nanny.  Walczak wrote that in addition to bridge, Gosia “is a voracious reader, loves the theater, and likes to dance.”
 Chubby Checker in 2019
In “When We Get to Surf City” Bob Greene described watching a blond woman “in the shortest of skirts” rushing the stage during a Chubby Checker performance at an Oldies concert in St. Louis, leaping on him and wrapping her arms and legs around his neck and waist.  Chubby kept twisting as he sang, and Greene wondered how he kept from tumbling onto the stage floor.  Jan and dean played a Clearwater, Florida, hospital fundraiser with Jerry Lee Lewis, backed by Elvis Presley’s former lead guitar player James Burton.  Jerry Lee’s eyes looked both dead and angry, Greene wrote, like “someone who had been insulted in ways no one could understand.”  During the show Greene spotted a young woman whose t-shirt read, "JUST EAT ME.”  Back at the century-old Belleview Biltmore, recently purchased by a Japanese company, Greene met a woman in her 80s who’d been vacationing there for a half-century and once danced to a tuxedoed orchestra in its once ornate ballroom.

Thursday, January 30, 2020

Small Farms

“Do what you love to do, and be around things that make you smile.  The cows make me smile every day.” David Jackson, Bentwood (Texas) Dairy
 David Jackson family at Bentwood Dairy

When I was growing up in the rural suburb of Fort Washington, PA, Wentz turkey farm was a mile from our house as well as the Van Sant farm, where seasonal work opportunities were available for teenagers. Living in Gary during the early 1970s, one could drive south on Broadway and come across farms later replaced by suburban sprawl.  In October we’d visit one to buy Halloween pumpkins; others sold Christmas trees. As teenagers during the 1980s Phil and Dave picked up spending money de-tasseling seed corn in rural Porter County.

Due in part to the expansion of agribusiness giants such as Monsanto, Cargill, and Archer Daniels Midland, the number of family farms in America continues to shrink by more than 100,000 since 2013, according to Time magazine.  Farm debt has rose close to $500 billion, and more than half of all farms lost money each of the past seven years.  According to the Department of Agriculture in 2017 the average farm size was 434 acres, and the number of small farms of less than 10 acres had shrunk to 273,000.  Farms of more than 2,000 acres accounted for 60 percent of total agricultural production.
 Mike Certa (3rd from left) in 2007 IUN retirement photo with Leroy Gray, Patti Lundberg, Florence Sawicki
Mike Certa wrote a piece titled “Two Treat Day” about visiting a dairy farm in Merrillville, Indiana, when he was a kid.
    When I was at Edison Elementary School in Gary, we were told that our class of “city kids” was going to have an outing to the “country” to see the Tony Smith Dairy Farm out in the wilds of Merrillville.  In addition to the farm, the Smith family ran a store as an outlet for their dairy products.  When I told my Mom where my class was going, she said, “Did you know that we’re related to Tony Smith?”  Of course, I didn’t.  Mom continued, “My grandma was Clara Schmit, and she was Tony Smith’s brother.  She was married to my Grandfather Michael Boesen.  Clara was my mother Anna’s mother.”
    I was confused and full of questions, “How come her name was Schmit and her brother’s name was Smith?  Who was Clara again?” Mom explained that the family came from Germany and that their name was originally Schmit.  Mathias Schmit and wife Catherin were granted possession of land in what is now Merrillville in 1852.  Their Grandaughter, Mom’s Grandma, Clara Schmit married Michael Boesen  in 1894. At that time, the entire family was known as Schmit.  During World War I (1914-1918), when Germany and America fought one another, many Germans living in American changed their names to more American sounding ones.  Schmit was changed to Smith.  When Tony (Schmit) Smith started his farm, he used his American name.
    Later I discovered what an amazing woman Clara (Schmit) Boesen was.  Widowed at an early age with four small children (Margaret, Francis, Raymond, and Anna), she began teaching school in Merrillville.  She later became the Griffith Postmistress, a post in which she served for decades.  Because of her job, she owned one of the first automobiles in Lake County.  Since she didn’t drive, she was chauffeured around by her youngest son, Raymond (also known in the family as Scotty).
    Mom remembered visiting her Uncle Tony’s farm with her mother and grandmother.  She told me to let them know that I was related to the owner.  She said, “Tell them that Tony Smith is your Great-Uncle.  Say that your mother is Cecelia Mae Govert from Griffith.”  The day of the school field trip she made sure that I took a piece of paper with me with that information on it.
    The bus picked us up in Brunswick.  As we got close to the farm, we could see cows in the fields and some barns.  The actual field trip is a bit of a blur.  They showed us the milking barn and some cows.  I was waiting for the visit to the dairy store for two reasons:  that’s where Mom told me to let them know who I was, and rumor had it there might be some sort of treat.
    Sure enough, once we got to the dairy store we were told we could get either a fudgesicle or a creamsicle.  When I got to the lady passing out the goodies, I said, “Tony Smith is my Great-Uncle.  My Mom is Cecelia Mae Govert from Griffith.”  The lady said, “What?  Who?”  I repeated my speech.  Still, the lady looked confused.  I pulled my piece of paper out of my pocket and handed it to her.  She took it and went into the back room, calling out to someone.  I don’t know who was back there, but when she came out she was smiling.  She said, “Well, since you’re a relative, you get a special treat.”  Then she gave me two treats: a fudgesicle AND a creamsicle!!!!!!!!!!  I was the envy of the entire class.
    Nowadays, when I drive past the intersection of Old Merrillville Road and 59th Avenue, and see the Smith Dairy Store (that is now across from Saints Peter and Paul Church), I think of that old location as part of my family’s history, enough to get me TWO ice cream treats. 
In 2018 NWI Times correspondent Jane Ammeson interviewed Merrillville/Ross Township Historical Society president Roy Foreman, who recalled: Smith's Dairy Farm on the north side of Merrillville gave tours to groups of school children and to Boy Scout and Girl Scout troops.”
Small Farms Apartments
Gary’s Small Farms on the west side near the Little Calumet River dates at least as far back as the 1930s.  Most homesteads are gone now, but Small Farms Apartments along 24th Avenue was constructed during the late 1970s, federally subsidized by the Department of Housing and Urban Development.  It is one of the neighborhoods included in a Flight Paths initiative I’m involved with as an oral historian. I ran into fellow participants Kay Westhues and Allison Schuette at a Gary Public Library reception organized by the Calumet Heritage Partnership titled “Calumet: The Land of Opportunity.” It included Calumet Regional Archives photographs and other items Steve McShane loaned them, including a Jackson 5 concert poster that caught my eye when I first arrived.  I chatted with colleague Ken Schoon, former IUN campus cop Ron Jones, labor activist David Klein, Gary librarians Maria Strimbu and David Hess, library board member Robert Buggs,former Gary council member Rebecca Wyatt, and Cedar Lake Historical Association director Julie Zasada, whose organization contributed a century-old sign advertising Bartlett cottages and who was one of the exhibit organizers. The buffet included chicken wings that thankfully weren’t so spicy as they appeared as well as miniature chocolate eclairs among the desert selections.
Robert Buggs, Kay Westhues, and Jimbo 
 ethnic kids at Gary's Bailly Branch library, 15th and Madison, 1922
Ron Cohen found a copy of Jean Shepherd’s “A Fistful of Fig Newtons” (1981) that contains a chapter titled “Ellsworth Leggett and the Great Ice Cream War” that begins with the author returning for a funeral to his hometown of Hammond, Indiana, which “stood craggy and sharp against the grayish multi-colored skies of the Region [and] resembled a vast, endless lakeside junkyard that had been created by that mysterious wrecking ball known as Time. . . An adult theater was on the very site on which the proud Parthenon theater had reposed, named after the Parthenon itself of ancient Athens.  It had been famous for its elegant lobby and its graceful Fred Astaire movies.  Now, TOPLESS MUD WRESTLING and dealers in greasy film cartridges shot in the cellars of Caracas.  Where Clark Gable was once the king, Linda Lovelace now reigned.” Shepherd contrasted his nondescript rental car with the old man’s Pontiac Silver Streak 8
    With its three yards of gracefully tapering obsidian black hood, its glorious Italian marble steering wheel with gleaming spidery chromium spokes – a steering wheel that could well hang on the walls of the Museum of Modern Art – its low, menacing purring classic Straight 8 engine, it bore as much resemblance to this 85-dollar-a-day tin can as the Queen Mary does to a plastic Boston whaler. 
    A giant dump truck roared past me, flinging bits of gravel and what appeared to be molten tar over my windshield.  Heavy diesel fumes rolled on my window.  I frantically tried to crank it up, but naturally the handle came off in my hand.  I flung it under the seat with a snarl, there to join the handle from the other door and the empty Pabst Blue Ribbon can thoughtfully left for me by the previous renter.

On the evening of the “war” between The Igloo’s owner Mr. Leggett and an ice cream franchise that had opened across the street from his ice cream emporium, the old man had taken the family out to “watch the mill”:  Shepherd wrote:
  “Watching the mill” was a special treat known only to the residents of the Region.  On hot nights people would drive to the lakefront and park in the velvet blackness near the shore to watch the flickering Vesuvius fireworks of the blast furnace and the rolling mills across the dark water.  Cherry-red ingots and sepia-shaded orange glowing sprays of sparks flung high in the air by the Bessemer converters made a truly beautiful and even spectacular sight as the hissing colors were reflected in the black waters of Lake Michigan.
    The smell of the lake was part of it, of course, Lake Michigan, that great, sullen, dangerous, beautiful body of water, is, in midsummer, like a primitive reptilian animal in heat.  For miles inland on such nights,  the natives can “smell the lake.”
    Not until I left the Region as a semi-adult did I realize that not everywhere was the northern sky a flickering line of orange and crimson, a perpetual man-made sunset.

Bridge opponent Lila Cohen recommended Tara Westover’s “Educated: A Memoir,” about the daughter of Mormon survivalists in Idaho home-schooled until she was 17, who, remarkably, earned a PhD from Cambridge University.  Lila had reviewed it for an AAUW publication.  Fred Green mentioned suffering a career-ending football injury at Indianapolis Brebeuf in eleventh grade. A linebacker and pulling guard, he’d been recruited by Notre Dame and West Point.  In “A Fistful of Fig Newtons” Jean Shepherd recalled being an intrepid defensive lineman at Hammond High where he “irrevocably shattered the ligaments of my left knee.” At a table with feisty 89-year-old partner Dottie Hart playing against two equally feisty octogenarians, we started the three hands late because our opponents had to use the bathroom. When we finished before the four other tables, one said, “Well, I guess we had time to use the restroom.”  I replied, “Yes, you’d even have had time to go number 2.”  She said, “TMI” – standing for too much information, a criticism she frequently gets from her grandchildren.  We all had a good laugh.
In Banta Center’s library I found Bob Greene’s “When We Get to Surf City: A Journey Through America in Pursuit of Rock and Roll, Friendship, and Dreams,” about the author’s unlikely 15-year gig as a backup singer at Oldies concerts for surf duo Jan and Dean.  “Surf City,” Jan and Dean’s first Number One hit, contains the line, “Surf City, where it’s 2 for 1, two girls for every boy.” Another couplet goes: “When we get to Surf City, we’ll be shootin’ the curl and checkin’ out the parties for a surfer girl.”  Greene compares his experience at middle-age to a kid’s fantasy of running away from home and joining the circus. Invited up on stage for the first time, he spotted headliner Chuck Berry waiting in the wings, mouthing the words to “Help Me Rhonda,” the Beach Boys hit Jan and Dean were covering.
Ray Smock 
Ray Smock shared an open letter constitutional scholar Richard Bernstein wrote to his former law professor Alan Dershowitz, which reads in part:
     I never thought that you would stoop so low as to embrace the pseudo-monarchical conception of the presidency treasured by President No. 45 and by those who enable him and do his bidding. Today, sad to say, those of us who are constitutional historians, who remember Watergate, and who know that a president of the United States is not a king of any kind are consumed with disgust, contempt, and revulsion by your embrace of the idea that a president can define the national interest by reference to his desire to win re-election, and that nothing but a violation of criminal law resulting in indictable felony can be an impeachable offense.
    You disgrace the legal profession, you disgrace this country, and you disgrace yourself by what you are saying in seeking to argue that No. 45 cannot be impeached except for an indictable felony.

At Cressmoor Lanes the impeachment trial was on TV but mute, no doubt a rehash of arguments repeated ad nauseum.  Instead of real cross-examination, the Democrats questioning the House managers and the Republicans tossing softball questions to Trump’s lawyers. I rolled a 450 series, slightly above my average.  My only double came in the final frame and helped the Engineers eke out series over Frank’s Gang.  Mark Garzella, disgusted with the Cubs, is switching loyalties to the White Sox.  I’m considering doing it, too, and told him I had been a Sox fan when former Philadelphia Phillies great Dick Allen was with the team. Jim Rennhack, a tall lefty, said he met Allen when invited to the Phillies’ spring training camp in Clearwater, Florida, right out of high school 50-some years ago. He was not offered a contract but received a check for $5,000.

Paul and Julie Kern, on the final leg of a 2500-mile road trip to visit their son in California, noticed a church sign near my favorite watering hole when I’d visit Midge, Pappy and Harriet’s, a haven for old hippies and the young at heart.