Showing posts with label Helen Booth. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Helen Booth. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 15, 2018

Bonehead Play

“A dispute historic in baseball, which enriched the language with two exceedingly forceful words, ‘bonehead’ and ‘boner,’ arose over whether Frederick Charles Merkle did or did not touch second base.” Mark Sullivan, “Our Times”
As a baseball historian, I knew about the bizarre conclusion to the 1908 National League season, when a make-up game between the Cubs and the Giants was necessary to decide the pennant due to 19-year-old Fred Merkle’s “bonehead” baserunning mistake. With the score tied in the bottom of the ninth at New York’s Polo Grounds, Giant shortstop Al Bridwell hit an apparent game-winning single, sending Moose McCormick home from third.  On first, Merkle saw fans swarming onto the field and ran into the dugout without first touching second base, a common practice in those days. Cubs second baseball Johnny Evers, however, noticed the gaffe and brought it to the attention of the umpires.  In fact, in a recent game against the Pirates the exact thing had occurred only there had only been one umpire, Henry O’Day, who missed what happened so the rule wasn’t enforced.  Largely because of the fuss Evers put up at that time, two umpires were assigned to the Cubs-Giants game, including the one who’d failed to see what happened against Pittsburgh.  According to David Hinckley, details of exactly what happened are hazy, “lost in the mists of time – mists that closed in rapidly”:
  In most accounts, Giants pitcher "Iron Man" Joe McGinnity dashed from the first base coach's box to intercept the ball Art Hofman threw back to the infield and fling it deep into the stands. That was that, McGinnity figured, except Evers was still yelling. If that ball was gone, he wanted another one. Eventually he found one. Some say it was the real one, ripped away from a fan in the stands by little-used relief pitcher Rube Kroh. Others say it was another ball, relayed to Evers by shortstop Joe Tinker and maybe even third baseman Harry Steinfeldt, in a bizarre alternate version of the Cubs' famous Tinker-to-Evers-to Chance double play combination.
  Whatever the ball's origin, Evers secured it, touched second base and asked the umpires – R.D. Emslie at second base and Henry O'Day behind the plate – to call Merkle out on a force play, which would nullify McCormick's winning run. Emslie, who fell to the ground avoiding Bridwell's single, said he didn't see whether Merkle touched second and therefore couldn't make a call. O'Day said he did see and no, Merkle did not touch second. Therefore, yes, he was out. 
Hall of Fame umpire Bill Klem, known as the “Old Arbitrator,” who officiated games for 36 years beginning in 1905, decried the decision as “the rottenest” he’d ever come across.
Prior to the playoff game a week later, “Iron Man” McGinnity, who wasn’t scheduled to pitch that afternoon, attempted to pick a fight with Frank Chance, hoping that both would be ejected; but the ruse didn’t work.  The Cubs went on to defeat Giants ace Christy Mathewson, 4-2, setting off a riotous aftermath, as described by David Rapp:
  The bad feelings ran so high, acknowledge a New York paper, that “the Chicago men were bombarded as they left the field, kicked, and reviled.”  Hundreds of rabid fans took to the field, growling and out for blood. Tinker, Sheckard, and others took hard knocks to the head, while someone slashed Pfiester on the shoulder with a knife. Another hooligan chased down Chance from behind and delivered a wicked chop across his neck.  The blow broke some cartilage and temporarily snuffed out his voice.
  When the team made it to relative safety in their dressing room, the doors barricaded, armed guards had to stand outside to hold the mob back.  The Cubs eventually were secreted back to their hotel in a patrol wagon with two cops inside and four more riding the running boards.  They hustled out of town that night for Detroit, site of the upcoming World Series, by slipping out the back door and running down an alley, escorted by a swarm of policemen.
The Cubs went on to defeat the Detroit Tigers 4 games to 1, their last championship for 108 years. Chance outplayed future Hall of Famer Ty Cobb, garnering 8 hits to his 7 and swiping 5 bases to his 2.

Baseball historian Trey Strecker wrote about another unfortunate incident involving Merkle in the deciding game of the 1912 World Series against the Boston Red Sox:
  Fred was poised to be the hero when his single in the top of the 10th inning scored Red Murray from second to give the Giants the lead. The bottom half began with Fred Snodgrass' infamous muff in center field, allowing pinch-hitter Clyde Engle to reach second base. After Harry Hooper flied out and Steve Yerkes walked, Tris Speaker hit a high foul near the first-base coach's box. Though most observers agreed that it was his ball, Merkle backed away when Christy Mathewson called for the catcher, Meyers, to make the catch. The ball fell to the ground, giving Speaker another chance, and this time he slashed a long single to right that started the Sox's winning rally. In New York, the headlines the next day read “Bonehead Merkle Does It Again.”

Sports writers employed “bonehead” during the NBA playoffs when Cleveland Cavalier J.R. Smith grabbed an offensive rebound in a tie game with seconds remaining and dribbled away from the basket rather than attempt a shot.  Even more egregious was Michigan All-American Chris Webber calling time-out with 11 seconds remaining in the NCAA championship against Duke when his team had none left, resulting in a technical foul and loss of possession.

Bridge Bulletin used this Larry Sherman letter under the heading Déjà vu?::
  I was called to a table at a game I was directing. North said someone had scored on their line.  East then chimed in that they had already played this board.  I tried to clarify whether East-West had played this board at another table.  North then realized that the handwriting on the traveler line was her own.  They had played the same board twice at thistable with a different contract and a different result.  That was a first for me.

In duplicate Dottie Hart and I finished with a 57.29 percent, good enough for third place and half a master point.  My only bonehead move came after Dottie opened one No-Trump and the person on my right bid 2 Diamonds.  I held 5 Hearts but just 7 points and using a transfer system would have said 2 Diamonds had my opponent not beat me to it.  I bid 2 Hearts and Dottie, believing that indicated a five-card Spade suit, responded 2 Spades.  When I bid 3 Hearts, she raised to 4 Hearts and I got set 2.  What I should have done initially was double 2 Diamonds. Then when Dottie bid 2 Hearts, I could have passed. On another hand, I got high board holding 6 Hearts, including the Ace, King, Queen, 5 Spades to the Queen and 2 singletons. I bid Hearts 3 times while Dottie kept passing and the opponents bid Clubs and Diamonds. Dottie had only one Heart, but a lucky 3-3 split enabled me to make the contract. Last week in a similar situation, a 5-1 split proved disastrous and resulted in a low board.

Bridge opponent Helen Booth mentioned having been a neighbor of Post-Tribuneowner H.B. Snyder, who committed suicide by walking into Lake Michigan.  Snyder’ss wife socialized with Heywood Braun and other members of New York City’s “Smart Set.” She’d write Post-Trib“Travel” columns about her trips abroad. Gary Mayor George Chacharis nicknamed Snyder, his arch-enemy, the “Duke of Dune Acres.” IUN professor Garret Cope’s parents worked for the Snyder family as cook and chauffer.  Helen lent me “Holy Horrors: An Illustrated History of Religious Murder and Madness” by her brother-in-law James A. Haught. The title seemed particularly relevant given the horrific headlines about atrocities committed by hundreds of Roman Catholic priests in Pennsylvania and subsequent church coverup. Haught signed the copy, “From a total heathen.”
 above, Christy Mathewson; below, Fred Merkle
Baseball goat Fred Merkle was an avid bridge player, often partnering in the New York clubhouse with Christy Mathewson, born in Factoryville, Pennsylvania, a graduate of Bucknell (my alma mater), and winner of 373 games during a stellar career.  Mathewson enlisted in the army during World War I and was accidentally gassed, resulting in tuberculosis and an early death in 1925 at age 45.  He was buried in Lewisburg Cemetery near Bucknell’s campus, known in the early 1960s as a “make-out heaven.”

Bonehead was the name of a children’s TV series that ran for three seasons on BBC beginning in 1960 and featured a dim-witted trio of crooks, Boss, Happy and Bonehead. 

Wednesday, August 8, 2018

Juggling Acts

“Most of us have trouble juggling.  The woman who says she doesn’t is someone I admire but have never met.” Barbara Walters
The earliest historical record of juggling goes back 4,000 years to a panel found in an Egyptian tomb thought to have religious significance, with the round objects possibly signifying solar objects. In ancient China a military leader, according to legend, used his juggling prowess to overawe enemy troops. Juggling acts became staples in circuses and a way of entertaining audiences between acts during vaudeville shows. Common props are balls, rings, and clubs, as well as more dangerous objects such as swords, flaming torches, and even chainsaws.  The records for most soccer balls juggled simultaneously is five, first achieved by Argentinean Victor Rubilar in 2006.
 Monica and Edgar in Mexico


In the spring of 2018 a pregnant Monica Verduzco juggled work, school, and family obligations while struggling with serious health issues.   She wrote:
January 29, 2018:I have been going back and forth and finally decided to have a first birthday party for Joaquin. I’ll rent the Riverview Park cabin in Lake Station.  It is inexpensive and hopefully big enough for our families. I gave my sister-in-law Maggie $150 for the deposit. She lives in Lake Station and I’m in New Chicago, which has a Hobart mailing address and pays Lake Station for water, sewer, trash, and police service; but somehow I don’t qualify as a resident.  I had a doctor appointment. My fiancé Edgar was able to go with me to see the ultrasound. I am 29 weeks pregnant and, oh, so high risk since I’ll turn 40 in March. This is my second child; it’s a girl. We haven’t decided on a name yet. 
January 30:Last fall I went back to school to become a history teacher. I am in UTEP (Urban Teacher Education Program) working towards a Master’s Degree in Secondary Education. There is a shortage of teachers in Indiana. I can only assume it’s because of the crappy pay and hostile environments of recent years.
February 5:Oh my goodness, so much homework, I feel like I may have to drop a class.  My boss scheduled me to work 45 hours for the next three weeks. This means it will be 50 because I never get out on time. I also do taxes for friends. I didn’t like to charge, but most insist on paying something, such as a case of Modelo beer or diapers. 
February 12:It’s my miracle child’s first birthday. Unfortunately, I have so much stuff going on that we aren’t going to celebrate until his party. I have 2 more taxes to get done this week. Edgar is laid off, and so is his uncle. They are fence erectors and probably won’t get work until April. 
February 14:Valentine’s Day is nothing special because I am so stinking busy. My boss has been gone and left us understaffed and without a proper schedule. I’ve even been asked to work two Sundays. 
February 19:At an appointment with the high risk doctor, everything went well. Even so, my thyroid is overactive, and the medication that I take is basically poison. It could cause low birth weight and a lot of growth issues for the baby. Edgar asked the nurse if there was still a possibility that it was a boy. The nurse reacted like he’s crazy. All I could do is shake my head; even the genetic test came back as a girl. Edgar is still hopeful that they are wrong. He is nervous about having a girl, I think; it’s funny how much he is over-reacting. 
February 24:At Sam’s Club we spent $200 on stuff for the baby’s birthday party on March 11, the first weekend day available, and we have a lot more to go. I did save a bunch of money by ordering a super cute Mickey Mouse cake and 28 cupcakes for $30. 
February 27:Edgar and I have talked about just going to the Justice of the Peace and getting married on my spring break before the baby is born. It makes me want to cry every time I have to tell someone my last name and then my son’s and they aren’t the same. The most important reason is that I almost died giving birth to Joaquin.  The nurses all talked about how scared the doctor was and how he stayed with me in recovery until I woke up, something he virtually never does. I am so worried about this delivery. I need to make sure that my family is taken care of. Everything that Edgar and I own is in my name. I have way better credit than Edgar and I have worked at the same place for 24 years. I have also owned my home for ten years. We have three vehicles and two are paid off. If anything happens to me,  he can sell them.  I need to make sure that he has a legal right to everything.  I have a friend who is an ordained minister and I might see if she’d marry us at Joaquin’s birthday party as long as Edgar is down for it. 
March 2:   Edgar liked the idea of one of my BFF’s marrying us. As long as we can get our license and his ring, we’ll do it at the birthday party. We ordered the ring and they said it should be here by in time. 
March 5:After my doctor appointments Edgar, Joaquin, and I went to Lake County Government Center for a marriage license. Edgar was super frustrated because we went into the wrong building three times.  He is really impatient. I feared he was going to leave, but he followed through. We haven’t told many people that we are getting hitched. We have been living as if married for almost seven years. We both come from Mexican backgrounds and our families are super Catholic, so they probably won’t think this is good enough since it wasn’t through the church.
March 10:I took today off. I usually work Saturdays but need to get everything done for the birthday party. Edgar’s ring came. We picked it up and went to Sam’s Club for last-minute items and to pick up Joaquin’s cake. At home I made pasta salad, broccoli salad, and a few desserts. The weather forecast is for tomorrow to be sunny and in the forties but snow in the evening. By then hopefully everyone will be home tucked in their beds. 
March 11:Everything turned out great. The decorations looked awesome, the food was great, and about 120 people came. The seating was a little tight, but we managed. Most of the kids played outside, so that gave us additional room. Amanda, my ordained minister friend, was pretty nervous with the size of the crowd.  Edgar and I were, too. I checked over the vows that Amanda printed off the internet and cut several paragraphs, telling her short and sweet was better. Then the three of us walked to the front, I grabbed the microphone from the DJ (because what first birthday party doesn’t have a DJ), and made the announcement. There were a few unexpected gasps and cheers from the crowd. Then we exchanged vows. Amanda was shaking so bad that it calmed us down. The whole thing lasted 3 minutes and 45 seconds.
Joaquin cried almost the whole afternoon except when he napped and when Edgar was holding him. He wouldn’t eat his smash cake or open his presents. Thank god, Edgar is an amazing father and now husband.  If everyone knew my story, how hard it was to get pregnant, stay pregnant and then stay alive during and after the delivery, I think they would understand why he is so pampered. 
March 12:It’s my birthday. I will say I am in such a better place in my life at 40 than I was at 30. I slept in and am in a lot of pain from yesterday.  My birthday present is that Edgar went back to work. I am excited because we need to keep saving for my upcoming maternity leave. Edgar, Joaquin, and I will go out for dinner. No big deal.  I have to take a three-hour glucose test tomorrow and need to fast for 12 hours, so I won’t be able to eat anything after 7 pm. I also need to watch my sugar intake, so no cake for me. 
March 13:After the torture of the glucose test at St. Anthony’s in Crown Point was over, I ate a footlong Firehouse sub. It was delicious. 
March 15:  I worked an 11-hour shift. My body is killing me. At least I am on Spring Break and don’t have class. I work across the street from the Key West Inn. Today they pulled another body from the motel. This time it was a murder, a woman with a daughter from Wheatfield who’d been missing. 
March 16: On my way to work I had to pass the motel.  A bloody mattress had been thrown in the dumpster for the whole world to see.  How horrific that they would do this. It is disgusting. I pray that none of her family pass by and see this. The place should be shut down. 
March 17:It is St Patrick’s Day, and I would love a nice cold green beer or just a regular beer for that matter. Being pregnant, I can’t have one for a few more months. I did make corned beef, cabbage, potatoes, and carrots for dinner. There were no leftovers, so I would say it was a hit. I am half Mexican and half Irish, two red hot combinations. I have a really bad temper, by the way. 
April 2:Joaquin was really, really bad.  Edgar has him so spoiled. He only wanted to go with him. That annoyed Edgar, who wanted to leave my sister’s house earlier than normal.  My health issues and all the expenses for medications are seriously stressing me out. 
April 21:My family threw Edgar and me a surprise shower for Mila, our baby girl. We finally decided on a name. Everything was perfect. I was really surprised and almost cried. Lina, my cousin and sister-in-law (she is married to my husband’s brother), coordinated everything. She thought out every detail and even bought me a dress in case I showed up in jeans and a hoodie. 
April 22:After I worked on homework, we went to my nephew’s soccer game. I wore a sun dress and flip flops, not a good idea. I froze my butt off. Joaquin slept almost the entire time. Joaquin loves soccer. He kicks the ball around with assistance, since he is such a chicken to walk on his own. We then went to El Capitan in downtown Hobart to get something to eat after the game.  I am due a month from today and hope I make it that long. This way I’ll get more time off in August when the weather is nice. I was a week late with Joaquin; he just didn’t want to come out. Maybe Mila will be late. I am really nervous.  My doctor is insistent that I try for a vaginal delivery instead of the C-section. I just have this sickening feeling that something is going to happen and I might die, leaving Edgar a widow with two children under the age of two. Edgar would go crazy parenting alone and I pray that he doesn’t have to. Hopefully, I am paranoid. 
 Mila


Perhaps due in part to heavy rain, we just had three tables at bridge.  The hand I wish I had bid differently began with the person on my left opening one Heart.  Joel, my partner, bid 2 Clubs and the person to my right bid 2 Spades.  I held six Diamonds to the Ace-ten and 3 Clubs to the King.  After much hesitation, I bid 3 Diamonds and everyone passed.  Joel had a singleton Diamond King, which wouldn’t have been too bad except I encountered a 5-1 split and went down 2.  Had I bid Clubs, we would have made the contract.  My reasoning was that since I had a singleton Spade, the six Diamonds would be more valuable, but I should have supported Joel’s Clubs.
 James A. Haught


Helen Booth will be attending her seventieth high school reunion in West Virginia, saying that she attended a Catholic school although not religious.  Her brother-in-law, James A. Haught, is the author of many books, including: “2000 Years of Disbelief: Famous People with the Courage to Doubt” (1996); “Holy Horrors: An Illustrated History of Religious Murder and Madness” (2002); “Fading Faith: The Rise of the Secular Age” (2010); and a memoir “Fascinating West Virginia: Wild, Memorable Episodes from the Longtime Editor of the Mountain State’s Largest Newspaper, The Charleston Gazette.” (2011).  Amazon.com included this biography:
  James A. Haught was born in 1932 in a small West Virginia farm town that had no electricity or paved streets. He graduated from a rural high school with 13 students in the senior class. He came to Charleston, worked as a delivery boy, then became a teen-age apprentice printer at the Charleston Daily Mailin 1951. Developing a yen to be a reporter, he volunteered to work without pay in the Daily Mailnewsroom on his days off, to learn the trade. This arrangement continued several months, until The Charleston Gazette offered a full-time news job in 1953. He has been at the Gazetteever since - except for a few months in 1959 when he was press aide to Sen. Robert Byrd.
    During his six decades in newspaper life, he has been police reporter, religion columnist, feature writer and night city editor. Then he was investigative reporter for 13 years, and his work led to several corruption convictions. In 1983 he was named associate editor, and in 1992 he became editor. He writes 400 Gazette editorials a year, plus occasional personal columns and news articles.
    Haught has four children, 12 grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren.For years he enjoyed hiking with a trail club, participating in a philosophy group, and taking grandchildren sailing off his old sailboat. He is a Democrat and longtime Unitarian Universalist.

Chancellor Lowe claimed he was spending more time than intended reading Paul Kern and my history of IUN, “Educating the Calumet Region.”  I told him I had spoken about it at an oral history conference and that the moderator got a kick out of descriptions of IUN’s History department during the 1970s when, to quote David Malham, the professors were a bunch of “Young Turks.”  Paul Kern recalled: “Faculty parties usually involved students and weren’t tea parties.The cultural milieu was more beer and Rock ‘n’ Roll than tea and classical music. It was more a case of the Sixties generation setting the tone.  Nobody would have dreamed of wearing a coat and tie to a history party. It was more casual than it might have been a few years before.” Interviewed by Andrew Bodinet, 1971 Horace Mann grad Milan Andrejevich, recalled a party where I blew a speaker playing a Rolling Stones album at such high volume.  At Tom Pancini and Al Sterken’s place on 35thAvenue in Glen park we wore out Pink Floyd’s album “Dark Side of the Moon.”   

I didn’t tell Lowe the title of my Oral History Association talk: “The Professor Wore a Cowboy Hat (And Nothing Else): Ethical Issues in Handling Matters of Sex in Institutional Oral Histories: IU Northwest as a Case Study.”   During the 1970s, faculty on average were much younger than today, and both the sexual revolution and the feminist movement were in full swing. Divorce was rampant.  Though regretful that she went straight from living at home to marriage and family obligations, thankfully, Toni stuck with me during those hazardous times.  Not so, four of my colleagues, who ended up remarrying students, although in most cases the women initiated the relationship.  My thoughts were often on preparing for class, writing scholarly articles, and doing what I deemed necessary to get tenure rather thinking about Toni’s needs.  We had just one car, hard to imagine, which often left her stranded at home.  I found time to play sports in the back yard with Phil and Dave but not always quality time with her.  Meanwhile, she was juggling various responsibilities while taking Fine Arts classes at IUN.
Joe Glowacki; Times photo by David P. Funk
Joe Glowacki, 29, won two gold medals in bowling at the Special Olympics in Seattle.  He has a 135 average but rolled a high game of 171. For seven years, he has been working at LARC (Learning Assistance Resource Center, serving people with developmental disabilities), folding and gluing boxes for BMW.  Joe once bowled a 201 and also swims and runs relays.

At lunch Mike Olszanski filled me in on the memorial service for union leader Eddie Sadlowski, evidently a three-hour affair at a former union hall converted into a church.  Roberta Wood, active in the Women’s Caucus when Eddie was district director, gave an eloquent speech.  We reminisced about “Old lefties” active in the rank-and-file steelworkers movement and the anti-nuke Bailly Alliance.  Oz Googled Joe Franz’s name and discovered he’d died after hitting his head while working out at a gym.  His wife had been married to a rather dour IUN Sociology professor until she became enamored with Joe during the Bailly fight.  In Steel Shavings (volume 16, 1987) Chicagoan Ed Gogal recalled first meeting Franz: 
  In 1977 a group us “no-nukers” came out to Indiana and met Herb Read and Ed Osann, who took us on a trek through the proposed nuclear plant site.  We trespassed on NIPSCO’s land, and Herb showed us how NIPSCO was ruining Cowles Bog. We wanted to get one demonstration under our belt before the weather got too cold.  We held a rally in a Chesterton park, and then people paraded to the NIPSCO offices and put a wreath, to symbolize the death and destruction from nuclear power, on the door there.
  That winter we started saying, “This is crazy.  We have a lot of nuclear plants in Illinois that have to be fought.”So we started calling ourselves the Bailly Alliance-Illinois..  But we kept meeting labor leaders, such as Mike Olszanski and Joe Franz, at our literature table.  They’d say, “We really support what you are doing, but we’re too busy trying to get the coke ovens cleaned up, we don’t have the time to get involved.”  Then a few months later, they jumped in with both feet and that’s really when the Bailly thing took off.
Toni and grandson James at Grand Valley State, August 2018

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

How I Miss Obama

“Do we participate in a politics of cynicism or a politics of hope?  Barack Obama
At bridge Helen Booth gave me a copy of a column by Max Boot, former foreign policy adviser to John McCain and Mitt Romney and author of the forthcoming book “The Corrosion of Conservatism: Why I left the Right.” Boot’s opening sentence reads, “How I miss Barack Obama.  And I say that as someone who worked to defeat him.”  He continued:
    I criticized Obama’s ‘lead from behind” foreign policy that resulted in a premature pullout from Iraq and a failure to stop the slaughter in Syria.  I thought he was too weak on Iran and too tough on Israel.  I feared that Obamacare would be too costly.  I fumed that he was too professorial and too indecisive.  I was left cold by his arrogance and cult of personality.
  Now I would take Obama back in a nanosecond.  His presidency appears to be a lost golden age when reason and morality reigned.  All of his faults, real as they were, fade into insignificance compared to the crippling defects of his successor.  And his strengths – seriousness, dignity, intellect, probity, dedication to ideals larger than himself – shine all the more clearly in retrospect.
  Those thoughts are prompted by watching Obama’s speech in South Africa on the 100th anniversary of Nelson Mandela’s birth.  I was moved nearly to tears by his eloquent defense of a liberal world order than Trump seems bent on destroying.
  The first thing that struck me was what was missing. There was no self-praise and no name-calling.  Obama has a far better claim than Trump to being a “very stable genius,” but he didn’t call himself one.  The sentences were complete and sonorous – and probably written by the speaker himself (imagine trump writing anything longer than a tweet – and even those are full of mistakes).  The tone was sober and high-minded, even if listeners could read between the lines a withering critique of Trump’s policies.
  Obama denounced the “politics of fear and resentment,” the spread of “hatred and propaganda and conspiracy theories,”and “immigration policies based on race, ethnic, or religion.”  Gee, wonder who he had in mind?  He rightly noted that “we stand at a crossroads – a moment in time at which two different visions of humanity’s future compete for the hearts and minds of citizens across the world.”  He then rejected the dark vision propagated by Trump and the dictators he so admires.
  “I believe in Nelson Mandela’s vision,” Obamasaid.  “I believe in a vision shared by Gandhi and King and Abraham Lincoln.  I believe in a vision of equality and justice and freedom and multiracial democracy, built on the premise that all people are created equal with certain inalienable rights. And I believe in a world governed by such principles is possible and that it can achieve more peace and more cooperation of a common good.”  Even though I was thousands of miles away, I felt like cheering those stirring words.

Helen Booth mentioned recently visiteingrelatives in Lewisburg, West Virginia. When Dick Jeary was grooming me to be his successor as Sigma Phi Epsilon social chairman at Bucknell, I booked a band from Philadelphia, Tommy and the Tones, to play at the fraternity’s Homecoming dance.  They didn’t arrive until minutes before they were scheduled to start, having gotten off the turnpike at Harrisburg but then followed signs to Lewisburg West Virginia rather than Lewisburg, Pennsylvania.

Bucknell’s alumni magazine focused on the 1950s.  Tuition in 1950 was just $500, and Art Linney won the 1953 Mr. Ugly Man contest after receiving the most change, $113.20, in his milk bottle.  Novelist Philip Roth, author of “Portney’s Complaint,” was a 1954 graduate. Bucknell’s president between 1954 and 1964 was Merle Odgers, whom I saw getting off a bus in Honolulu in 1965 with a woman who may have been his wife while I was attending the University of Hawaii.
 Steinbeck
At Chesterton Library to return Richard Russo’s “Bridge of Sighs,” I spotted his latest, “The Destiny Thief: Essays on Writing, Writers, and Life,” in the new nonfiction books section.  Russo had an epiphany about the importance of tone, mood, andbeing able to assume different identities by reading a description of a brothel in John Steinbeck’s “Cannery Row” (1945) that reminded him of his father’s voice – unsentimental, cynical, realistic.  Steinbeck had written: 
    Up in back of the vacant lot is the stern and stately whore house of Dora Flood; a decent, clean, honest, old-fahioned sporting house where a man can take a glass of beer among friends.  This is no fly-by-night clip-joint but a sturdy, virtuous club, maintained and disciplined by Dora who, madam and girl for 50 years, has through the exercise of special gifts of tact and honesty, made herself respected by the intelligent, the learned, and the kind.  And by the same token she is hated by the twisted and lascivious sisterhood of married spinsters whose husbands respect the home but don’t like it very much.
    Dora is a great woman, a great big woman with flaming orange hair and a taste for Nile green evening dresses.
A celebration of labor leader Eddie Sadlowski’s life will take place in Chicago.  Paul Kaczocha, who described himself as a “wage slave for capitalism since 1967 and still going but not for much longer,”recalled first meeting “Oil Can Eddie” in 1973 in a eulogy titled “A Life Bigger Than The Man.”  Here are the first couple paragraphs:
    I was barely over 21 when I first met Ed Sadlowski. Al Sampter, a US Steel Coke Oven worker with a long history of struggle in the mill and the Union, asked me if he could bring Ed over to talk to me about his campaign to run for District 31 Director of the Steelworkers. At that time there were over a million steelworkers in the Union and District 31 was the largest. Al was a former Communist Colonizer from New York and was part of the grass roots revolt going on in the Steelworkers to democratize the Union and bring in new blood. Workers were upset about a recent dues increase and with giving up the right to strike along with having no right to ratify their contract especially one seen as a surrender of labor’s basic right to withhold our labor. Most importantly the voices of Black, Brown and women workers were absent from the national leadership.
    Al brought Ed, twelve years my senior, to my apartment in Gary one summer evening and I remember thinking that Ed, who was a huge over weight Staff Representative for the Union, was the stereotypic fat cat Union rep. However he talked the talk of trying to change the Union and take out the same people who had run the district for 30 years since the Union’s inception. I was spellbound as his rap touched a nerve in me. I was a young new Union representative at a shop full of young people at a plant that was the newest built fully integrated steel mill in the U.S. - Bethlehem Steel’s Burns Harbor plant. Like Ed’s father my grandfather, helped build the Union and had been a staff representative for the same District that Ed was trying to take over. Ed convinced me to join the cause of changing the Union by taking it over. You CAN beat city hall he was fond of saying. He used to tell me that when you were a Union rep you had to stay on the side of the angels and that some guys would sell out the members over a steak when the boss took them out to dinner. 
Here is the final paragraph of Kaczocha’s essay:
    I would run into Ed all over the Chicago area at different protests and even at a labor history tour of Chicago. We were at one of the Steelworker rallies for steel against imports and he told me that tariffs were no good for the worker. Tariffs raised the price on everything and it just cost workers more to live. One of the last times I spent some time with Ed was in the first Obama election when we took the good part of a day campaigning going door to door for Obama in Gary. Ed told me that he had worked with Obama and that it was going to be a long shot on how much Obama would do for labor. Ed Sadlowski was a different leader, ahead in his time opposing the Viet Nam War, tariffs and favoring a more democratic Union. His candidacy inspired many to a life of Union action way beyond his original campaign. 

I’ve finally gotten around to examining “Ides of March” journals that Steve McShane’s students kept in the spring.  Here’s part of what Traci L. Schwartz wrote:
    Introduction:I’m 44 years old, and my personal version of a midlife crisis comes as a return to school.  It took me 5 years to complete a 2-year associate’s degree at Ivy Tech in Valparaiso because I had to take 5 remedial courses in Mathematics. To say it was difficult is an understatement, I conquered my worst fear  - that I was too stupid to learn algebra.  I decided to pour myself into being a full-time student.  While studying Math, I took only one course at a time. Perhaps this seems like overkill, but I knew what I needed to succeed, and I allowed myself to have it in order to learn.  Last semester was my first at IUN.  Sometimes my family gets sick of me and my education.  My husband Bernie says he’ll be glad when I get done and get a job so he can finally retire.  He is 14 years my senior and has worked as a Teamster while I was a stay-at-home mom. We lived with my mom in Portage, and I took care of my great grandma, Etta Brown, during the daytime, while mom went to work.  She died  in 2000 at age 99. I loved her during my childhood, and through dementia and cancer. My mother’s father’s mother, she was the kindest woman I have ever met. Being Jewish, she introduced me to such strange food like gefilte fish, matzo ball soup, borsch, and macaroons. It was awful when we had to move her from the apartment on Sunnyside Avenue in Chicago, but she was being robbed constantly, and cockroaches had infested her things.  I loved taking her and my daughter to Deep River Park. I miss the simplicity of those days. My second daughter Saylor was born in 2001 and my third Sorenn in 2003.  Soon afterwards, my mom’s father, who was diagnosed with colorectal cancer, came to live with us - staying in the same room his own Mother had used.  She had been a saint, but he was ornery.  He died in 2005. My daughters were all in preschool or elementary school, so I spent most of my time cleaning, cooking, chauffeuring, homework helping, and bill paying.  In 2012 my grandfather’s sister, Millicent, came to live with us.  She had a little dachshund and would not leave its side.  Millicent was almost as sweet as her mom but slightly more assertive.  She was with us for 5 years.  She went daily to the Bonner Senior Center; a bus picked her up and dbrought her back home.  One morning she fell, hit her head on the tire of the bus, and broke 2 vertebrae in her neck. She died shortly thereafter and was buried with her parents, in the traditional Jewish tradition. Our family is not religious, but we sat Shiva for her. I feel guilty for enjoying my education, because I get so busy, taking a full load of classes.  I hope my going to school is making an impression on my daughters, because I do not want them to rely on a man the way I rely on their father or rely on me, as I have relied on my mother.  I want for them to be able to support themselves, and to choose an equal partner. My greatest wish is to graduate before my mom passes away.  I lost my dad in 2010, and he didn’t see me graduate from Ivy Tech in 2016.  
    March 15, 2018:I woke up at 6. I’m trying to look professional because I go to Longfellow New Technical Elementary in Griffith, as a part of my Education field experience under third grade teacher Mrs. Rose Phelan. In the morning I worked on a door display. For lunch I at Burger King, a whopper cost me darned near $6.  I better not get too used to this, I thought, teachers don’t earn enough for this kind of malarkey!  I returned to working on the door, hoping that I did not have oniony whopper breath, but I’m sure I did, and hell with it, the damned thing cost so much, I might as well have some kind of extended experience.  After lunch, Ms. Phalen printed the wording she wanted to use for the door. She decided to make the words look like clouds, so after putting the cloud wording in place, I had 2 types of butterflies, 2 types of bunny rabbits, 3 types of flowers, and a bumble bee. I cut more green stems to add to the largest flowers after placing them, or it appeared they were all just floating in the air. I got many compliments from staff.  I found out, as I worked on the project, that it was a contest, put together by the principal.  
The very best part of my day was when the principal asked if I had to make up a day during my spring break. (Yes, this IS why showing up is half the battle, by the way.) I said “No, I just LOVE it” with a giggle. I told her this (education) is my “Corvette,” my middle-aged dream of being an active part in our world.  Then she asked me if I was interested in working in an urban school.I said “Oh, yes” and barely contained doing my happy dance, and stopping my eyeballs from popping out. On the way home I picked up corned beef, cabbage, turnips, parsnips, carrots, and potatoes! Tomorrow is St. Paddy’s!  
    March 16:  I take my two high school girls to Portage between 7 and 7:15. My 19 year-old, C’Belle, wants to go to school with me for study-time, as she is a student at Ivy Tech.  I come back, and she tells me at 7:30 about the big mess of dog vomit she found. She cleaned it up and took out all the yucky trash WITHOUT being asked.  We studied for 5 hours at IUN’s Anderson Library and afterwards she said she wanted to try a sweet shop in Gary she’d heard about, Z’s Donut Bar, located at 1929 Broadway.  On the way we passed a dilapidated football stadium and several baseball diamonds.  Only in Gary, Indiana.  Z’s was a cute little place and painted to look sweet, in fuchsia and white.  My kid went in. I didn’t want anything, so I waited in the car.  C’Belle returned with a giant milk shake and two donuts!  At home, and my husband needed to pick up a trailer from his brother in Winamac, so we ate out at a place I have been wanting to go, One Eyed Jack’s, known for serving huge, delicious pork tenderloin. 
    March 17: I am cooking. Turnips, and Cabbage, and Carrots, and Potatoes and Rutabega, and CORNED BEEF!  The family will enjoy it today, and then I’ll freeze individual portions to heat up later in the microwave.  My kitchen is steamy, and there are veggie scraps in my rabbit cage. All is good in the world.
    March 23: I am taking new ADD meds and am concerned if I will be able to concentrate enough to do my studies effectively.  My shrink is out of Porter Starke, one of the few low cost mental health providers in the area. Since I have depression, I decided to go to a real shrink instead of my family doctor, who found that my depression is comorbid with ADHD.  This seems logical, as when I was a child, I was thrown out of Catholic school in Markham Illinois due to my parents not wanting to medicate me. In any case, my attention span is poor.  Also I cannot bring myself to start anything without a major interior battle.  It gets really old. I wish that I could afford mental health counseling, but sometimes my husband’s health insurance lapses, and I simply can’t afford it. I loved going when I had a regular therapist. I loved her; she did some bad-ass therapizing.  Anyway, my homework includes typing up a Teacher interview with Rose Phalen at Longfellow and finishing my History notes.  Then I have an online class about development of young children which requires a journal and a discussion over the required reading, and then another field reflection on my Longfellow experience.  My husband got laid off, and I wish I could sit at home, watch my favorite soap, and visit with him, but I have all this. 
Bernie, Traci, Traci's mom, Aunt Millie and Traci's daughters

Monday, October 16, 2017

Do Not Go Gentle

“Old age should burn and rave at close of day
Rage, rage against the dying of the light”
         Dylan Thomas, “Do not Go Gentle into that Good Night”
 Dylan Thomas


Watching the Cubs defeat the Nationals on TBS, I saw far too many commercials but took note when one by Goboldly (evidently a biopharmaceutical consortium) quoted the Welsh poet Dylan Thomas about battling symptoms of old age. “Big Pharma” can easily afford to bankroll the classiest of ads.  A Volkswagen commercial used nostalgia to attract baby boomers and their wannabies by showing hippies in VW buses at Woodstock with Joe Cocker singing “With a Little Help from My Friends.” I got a good laugh seeing Snoop Dog being touted as the upcoming host for a revival of “Joker’s Wild,” a quiz show Dave loved when a pre-schooler. 

The Cubs triumphed in the finale of the five-game series thanks in large part to a successful pick-off play at first when Nationals player José Lobaton took his foot of the bag for an instant and Anthony Rizzo kept the tag on him.  The camera showed manager Dusty Baker grimacing when the umpires announced their final decision.  Dusty managed the Cubs for four years, beginning in 2003 (the ill-fated year of Bartman), and, in my opinion, was unfairly blamed for things beyond his control.
 above, Lobaton picked off; below, Dusty Baker with trademark toothpick



After three straight losses in Fantasy Football, Jimbo Jammers got more points than any other team thanks to big days by Jordon Howard, Carlos Hyde, Antonio Brown, Kirk Cousins, and the Ravens special teams, scoring TDs on kickoff and punt returns.  Cousins not only passed for 330 yards and two TDs but ran one in and rushed for a total of 26 yards.  Tough luck for Anthony’s The Powerhouse, which had the second most points.
Toni fell and aggravated her already injured knee but gamely went with us to Northside Diner in Chesterton for breakfast prior to gaming.  Dave’s high school classmate and friend Wayne Thornton did Northside’s outside mural. For the first time in many months, we played Air Lords, an Evan Davis invention.   During a day of record-breaking rainfall Toni also gutted out a trip to Outback Steakhouse and then finished first in bridge.  Hosts Connie and Brian Barnes are both my age.  On a bureau, I spotted a birthday card highlighting the year 1942.  Most items had to do with wartime prices and news, but one mentioned the internment of over 100,000 Japanese-Americans.

Thanks to a DNA ancestry search, Helen Booth, a friend from duplicate bridge, discovered that she has two half-sisters.  Her father evidently took off shortly after Helen was born.  It was during the Great Depression and may have been an act of desperation.  Helen never saw or heard from him again.  Back then, family secrets and so-called skeletons in the closet were not uncommon.   My great-aunt Grace and grandpa Elwood Metzger both had lovers but kept up appearances by not living together.   Great-aunt Ida M. Gordon, who lived with us, had evidently gotten swept off her feet by a sharpie from Philadelphia who deserted her soon after they married.  At least that’s the official story.  Not only did I never ask Aunt Ida about him, my mother never gave me a clear sense of what happened.
Library staff member Anne Koehler asked me to proofread an upcoming Portage Historical Society Bulletin. I thought she meant the entire thing and gave her a couple good suggestions, but Anne was referring to an excerpt from my Portage Shavings issue that mentioned recently deceased Irline Holley being a founding member of the Portage Historical Society. Anne also loaned me Matthew A. Werner’s “Season of Upsets,” about the 1950 Cinderella Union Mills basketball team, which upset Michigan City Elston to win the Sectional before bowing to Hammond High. Hammond lost in the Regional finals to Lafayette Jefferson, which in turn was upset in the state championship by tiny Madison (student population: 270).


Ron Cohen’s son Joshua passed away, a gentle soul in his mid-40s.  We knew Josh well before he moved with his mom to Indianapolis (once, setting off a firecracker on July Fourth, we feared he’d blown off a finger) and then again as an adult.  Whenever he’d see me, he’d flash a winsome smile and be interested in how I was doing.  Josh overcame some hard knocks before finding a good woman and a decent job and fathering son DeQuane.  He had a fetching smile and a good heart, and Ron is taking the loss hard.

An article by former Indiana Poet Laureate Norbert Krapf in the Summer 2017 issue of Traces highlighted the life and poetry of Etheridge Knight, a Mississippi native and Korean War veteran reborn in prison, where he served an eight-year sentence for stealing ten dollars to support a drug addiction. His most famous poem in “Feeling Fucked Up”
Norbert Krapf wrote: “Even if we don’t like poems in which the ultimate swear word is allowed to rampage free, we must admit that few poems in our language express better how ‘lowdown’ lost love can bring us.”
6+-
.
 Ben Edwards



Post-Tribune columnist Jerry Davich wrote movingly about 11-year-old Ben Edwards, whose parents died last month as a result of a murder-suicide.  Michael Watkins apparently shot his wife, jewelry maker and artist Leila Edwards, and then took his own life. Speaking with Davich at the home of his maternal grandparents Edward and Donna Edwards, Ben asked that his photo be taken with pictures of both parents.  Leila owned Wonderland Stained Glass and Ben’s Bodacious BBQ Bakery and Deli in Miller, named for her son.  He is a fifth grader at Discovery Charter School in Chesterton, where James and Becca graduated from.  Ben told Davich he likes math and science, participated in spell bowl and chess club and hopes to become an engineer. Davich wrote:
   When Watkins' restaurant opened in January, Ben helped his father, working the cash register, taking customers' orders and selling his own homemade baked goods. “Cookies, brownies, cinnamon rolls, banana bread, lots of other stuff,” Ben recalled proudly. “He's quite the little chef," Anthony Edwards said. “He enjoys baking because of the science behind it.” Ben smiled again.
    His mother was a talented stained-glass artist and jewelry maker who taught her many skills to school students, curious friends and, of course, to Ben. “My mom taught me everything she knew,” Ben said. “Or I just picked it up by watching her.”
 Viki Williams with summer "sons" Andy Shipman, Aaron Cook, and Kyle Heyne



On Jerry Davich’s website, Viki Williams share Gary memories:
  I grew up on Wabash on the dead end street. Railroad tracks behind my house and 4th Ave in front. As kids we used to go up under the overpass and write on the concrete with chalk. I often want to go there to see if anything is still there. It was protected from the weather, so who knows? Our parents always told us that bums slept there...except we never saw anyone and it didn’t scare us. We just felt they were passing through on the trains. The people who live there are still taking care of the street. I left in 1971, and our next-door neighbors are still there. The Pennsylvania Station is long gone (used to put coins on the tracks and were scared we would derail a train.) That is the part that is overgrown. We would take pieces of cardboard and slide down the hill, play baseball in the triangular section at the end of the street, and all kinds of games in the street. We would go to Popsicle Mary's, which was in the basement of the lady's house where she had a freezer and several gumball machines that she kept full of gumballs and prizes. We would go to Station 8 and have lunch with the firemen. The only one I remember was Sgt. Calloway because he would play basketball with the neighborhood kids. We would play kickball against the pieces of wood at the Gary Sign Company and not get yelled at because we did no damage. I so miss that.


Tori was in her Grand Valley school’s homecoming court, and sister Miranda, a graduate, volunteered for the dunk tank.