Sunday, June 7, 2015

The Belmont Stakes 2004

    The Belmont Stakes  2004

From;  "The Continuing Adventures of Wooples the Cat"

     It was a terrible day in Philadelphia. It was raining fairly heavily and kind of cold too.  I had been watching the running of the Belmont Stakes with Wooples. Wooples rarely watched television but he would keep me company if I was interested in watching a program. He preferred watching the birds on the front lawn. Hed jump up on the back of the chair by the front window and peer out between the vertical blinds with an intensity that reminded me of documentaries of hunched lions peering at prey through high grasses.  But today was different. We were going to watch Smarty Jones win the triple crown of horse racing and have a Smarty Party.  I had been caught up in the Smarty Jones excitement that had  swept through Philadelphia. Smarty was going to win the triple crown of horse racing and Philadelphia was going to be famous and the whole world would be happy.
     I had explained all this to Wooples during a commercial about Visa credit cards. Wooples assured me that he would help me root for Smarty and that he felt confident that Smarty would win the triple crown of horse racing andPhiladelphia would be famous  and the whole world would be happy.  
      The rest is history. As Smarty got nosed out toward the finish, I turned the TV off. I couldnt bear to see or hear any more. I was thrown back to 1964 when the Phillies lost the national league pennant.  We were 6 0r 7  games ahead toward the end of the season. All we had to do was win one game, one game in ten. We lost them all! Goodbye world series. Goodbye famous Philadelphia. Goodbye happy world. It just wasnt in the cards.
     Wooples was lying on the floor with his chin on the carpet, his eyes nearly closed. He turned and looked up at me. "He ran as fast as he could" he said, and shut his eyes. He shuts his eyes whenever hes sad or sympathetic. Sometimes he shuts his eyes when you scratch his back or pet him but then he purrs too.
"I dont know what happened Wooples"  - I offered, lost for an explanation. "He was supposed to win. Everyone said he was going to win. The odds were 1-5!! for heavens sake."
     We let it go for several hours. Wooples was still brooding. He broods when he doesnt understand something. "He tried as hard as he could" he said. "He ran with all his heart Smarty probably feels real bad now."
     I felt bad too. I imagined a large number of people in Philadelphia who had to cancel their Smarty Parties felt bad as well. No triple crown. No famousPhiladelphia. No happy world. No champagne. Just a big let down. Sometimes you lose Wooples. When you lose, youre supposed to feel bad. "OK", he said, and we brooded together.



Friday, June 5, 2015

Working the System

People that claim that school is a total waste of time are definitely ignorant. Certainly they haven't listened closely to their teachers or watched what was going on because there is a wealth of learning occurring there.
It was only in second grade where I first realized there was a way to beat the system. Legal Loopholes. There're legal loopholes in everything! Anything!
My favorite thing in the second grade was candy. Ask anybody. Candy is the best thing there is without a doubt. Any second grader knows that. There's only one problem - and I'm not talking about ruining teeth or appetites for dinner. The only problem is that it is absolutely forbidden - against the law - forget it - to eat candy, chew gum, display candy of any kind in the classroom. Can't do it.
Unless you're smart. And smart is why we're in school. Many of you might have missed this lesson. so we're going over it again. The key is "Doctor". Doctor is the highest level of address, the highest level of anything there is in education - almost in the world. The only thing higher is "filthy rich"!  So there's the legal loophole. If the doctor says it's OK to eat candy in the classroom, anybody and everybody can eat candy in the classroom - every day - all the time - all over the place -  it's candy day! Get it? Sure - it's coming back. Bring in a note from the doctor. That's all you have to do. All is excused. More of this later.
Now, the Smith Brothers have already set up this loophole. Remember the Smith Brothers? Those two long bearded gents on the box of Smith Bros. Cough Drops? They're still going strong. More power to them.They got away with selling these licorice, anise and sugar candies as medicine and made quite a bit of money at it - bless them - anything works for forty percent of the people - anything - just check this out! Salt over the shoulder works too. This is not the point however. And I like Smith Bros, Cough Drops - especially the wild cherry, the bubble gum, and the roast chicken very much! I like to think that you're getting this.

Private School

A new type of teaching job has come my way recently. A sort of semi-private school, both a live-in, boarding school as well as a locally "drafted from the eighth grade" contingent of students.
The sign business has been slow meanwhile and needs more promoting.
I had a story in mind yesterday, to write for you, but I can't recall it. It would have had to be a true story and, at the same time, entertaining. I can't for the life of me remember any part of it except for birds eating seeds? - possibly an experience I had as a young boy at my friend's family's farm. - we'll see.

Friday, May 29, 2015

How to Work

                                                                            How to Work

As a retired teacher, I can't help but look back at the changes that have occurred over the years.
Certainly, many things change naturally. They keep up with social and technical developments. There's
not much need to drive a horse and wagon loaded with ice through the streets of Philadelphia today. I can recall when men did this. We really liked when the "iceman" would chip off a piece of a block of ice and throw it to us on the steamy July days that seemed to go on forever when we were kids. Hey,  I can remember summers that seemed longer than forever, and they were great summers too! No, there's no icemen around anymore, not around any place I know anyway. This is not particularly bad though. We don't have to hunt deer with bows and arrows or throw spears or rocks either. That's not bad either. The point is that we don't have to teach it in school any longer.
This story is about "work" and its meaning to a ten year old child - me.
The father of one of the students in our fifth grade class died trying to save a little girl from drowning. He had jumped in a lake or some river trying to save her and he drowned. I don't know what happened to the girl, but I felt sorry for the boy in our class. He now had no dad and the reason was that his dad had tried to save a little girl. That was sad. It wasn't right somehow. So I decided to make an effort to be a better friend to the boy. This was an introduction to the world of "work"  for me. Soon, I found myself working in the same linoleum flooring store as my friend. We would clean up and sweep the floor and carry rolls of linoleum flooring to the customers that lived around the neighborhood. Some of those rolls got real heavy on the shoulder by the time you got to the person's house. Occasionally, I would go to the store and buy a cup of coffee for our boss, the fellow that owned the store. I remember the smell of the coffee and  the paper  cup in the bag just as if I was carrying it down the street right now. "Work" had all kinds of twists and turns and details you'd never expect. The best part of this job, was getting paid on Saturdays. I think it was fifty cents for after school and Saturdays. That was a lot of money for a kid. Two comic books at least. Candy bars so you could chew on 'em and read the comic books at the same time. I also bought a stamp album and I'd buy stamps and glue them in with these little sticky transparent tabs. It was great fun for a ten year old. The ideas for all of this probably came from our class at school.
We did other kinds of "work" too. We sold pretzels around the neighborhood. Reisman's Pretzels. There were prizes for selling the most pretzels. I think they still do this.  My Mom got all our relatives to buy boxes of pretzels and I won a little flash camera. Gosh I miss that camera.  
Later, at another school, I think, we sold magazine subscriptions. I won a lamp for that.
It's amazing just how much practical know how you can pick up as a child in school.

How to "work" is an important lesson that I think needs more emphasis today. 

Sunday, May 24, 2015

Memorial Day 2015

                                                               Memorial Day 2015
It was around 1976 in Washington State. We had just pulled out of Viet Nam and my permanent duty station was Ft. Lewis, Washington. Half our unit, the second of the fourth field artillery, ninth division went to Korea. I stayed "home". We had a choice and I was married and lived in Tacoma near the base with my wife. Still, even though at home, we trained hard at places like "Yakima" in western Washington state;  a large desolate area of rocks and mountains and I can't remember seeing a plant, not even sagebrush.  It was appropriate as a training ground for field artillery maneuvers.  
I remember getting "lost' out there at night and getting a ride on top of a tank turret. It really swung around and you had to hold on for dear life onto these steel handles as it spun around. It was quite a ride in the total black of that night. These tankers - they were just kids really, learning to drive, were tearing up the countryside. I don't know how they stayed on any kind of path - or if they had to. I just hung on and hoped I'd get back to my unit somehow. They stopped and opened up these big search lights they had mounted on the tanks. What a show - bright lights onto the hills and mountains in the middle of the night. I guess it was part of their training program.
I made it back to my unit and I was told there'd be training maneuvers all night long. I thought about these guys driving all over the desert with tanks and half-tracks and whatever and decided to hunker down under our deuce and a half - a two and a half ton truck, just in case one of these guys would come ripping across the desert and not even notice me in my sleeping bag. Let me tell you guys, if you haven't done your service yet. "Take care of yourself" - it might be that no one else will! "Think!" Find yourself a safe cozy spot and make a home!  I had lived and worked on a ship for a while and I'd learned a few things.
Sure enough, twenty six guys lost their lives that night - mostly all run over!  This was peacetime in the USA. Imagine being in an actual battle in Europe or the Pacific. Being shot at, bombed, I knew exactly what an artillery shell did. Pretty vicious stuff, naturally. We're lucky over here in the good ol' USA - all safe and warm and cozy.

Thanks guys!!

Friday, April 24, 2015

The Externet


There's still some controversy  surrounding the origin of the concept of the "externet". Many state that, in fact, the externet has always been here, only not as a truly formal and legally designated entity. Certainly billboards and many different kinds of outdoor advertizing have existed as well as the oral version of the externet, common speech, as an example, for that matter. What's important here, though, is what will get you a passing grade in college or any bona fide technical institution that grants  degrees or certificates in "externet design"  or "site development", which would presumably allow an applicant easy access to a real job. Let's face it, "practical" has become a nearly totally dollars and cents measurable issue anyway you look at it.
So the real answer as to "origin of the externet" lies in the story forwarded by the founding officers of T-REX  the world's premier externet provider which boasts an annual gross of three trillion (and some) dolleros currently, and that's a lot of very large words conveying a very heavy and fast moving message.
Mitchell Berkowitz and Howard Zuft, both swear to the same story. Drinking canned beer in Mitchell's garage on Garfield street in Cambridge, a few blocks from their classes in political science at Harvard University with a couple of drifters they picked up on the streets who were begging with cardboard signs. Howard said that the germ of the idea came to them from the signs, perhaps simultaneously, certainly close to  the same moment. "I will work for food", both signs proclaimed. The message struck home and the world's first externet office opened. "The text is too small on these smart phones", Mitchell spoke loudly in  a slightly beer slurred voice. "You need larger cardboards to reach the guys" Charlie Fans, soon to be Eastern US CEO of T-REX International, vitually bubbled in. He was drooling a  bit from the Bud Light.
The rest you can imagine. Protest posters, Buttons, Cardboards, Balloons. We're all familiar now with the Externet, but then it was all just an idea in a garage. Yes, there was the T-Shirt revolution that many credit with providing the foothold that the Externet needed to develop the way it has. Obviously many other areas in the enormous sphere of communication touched and contributed to its development.
You look around today and everybody has their sign. It is pinned to their shirt or hat or fixed somehow with one of the many sign frames available. It tells you their name, their favorite kind of music, information about their pets and what kinds of food they prefer - all of that. You know, before the Externet, you had to get to know people first and actually ask them questions to get to know things like that. It's so much easier today. The world just keeps getting smaller and people know so much more about your pets than ever before and anyone who works can usually be fed!

Saturday, April 11, 2015

The Fastest Scoop in the East


The Fastest Scoop in the East

As a fifteen year old who really liked ice cream, and what fifteen year old doesn't, it was a perfect job in
a perfect place and at a perfect time of my short yet somehow still  fascinating life. It was an after school
job in a neighborhood luncheonette. My Mom worked next door as a courtesy driver for a  beauty shop.
She  got me the job. It was a family owned sort of diner - restaurant that specialized in huge sandwiches
and gigantic  ice cream concoctions.  The food, all of it, was better than good. It was extraordinary to the
degree that the Former  Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad denied  that it ever existed. So it goes
for very fine  things. The ice cream was no exception, of course, and,  for that matter, a wonder  itself.
In the summer people would line up outside all the way around the corner. At least a hundred people
 would spend an hour or so talking and smoking and yelling at their kids and generally having a great time
just waiting to get in.
It was a difficult breaking-in period for me for several reasons. First of all, there was stage fright. I had
 always been on the other side of the counter. A customer. Suddenly I was on stage and absolutely
without any idea of what I was supposed to do or how to do it. I couldn't even hide. You know, fifteen year
olds stand out for their awkwardness anyway. They're funny that way. All I had to protect me was a white
shirt and pair of trousers and a folded over white apron tied around my waste. In addition I had a very 
heavy plaster cast under my chinos from my hip all the way down to my ankle.  I tried to sort of swing it
around so that no-one would notice. I had torn a cartilage playing football for school and it would take a
week or two to heal properly. They told me  later that everyone thought I was lame and were being polite
and not asking me about it. This is a true story - that's why it's funny!
Fortunately, the proprietors had two sons, both of whom "worked the fountain" and helped me learn the
tricks I needed to know to perform adequately and keep up with the customer's demand for sodas and
milkshakes and ice cream delights, There  were customers who sat at the fountain itself on round stools
that rotated - perhaps a dozen or so, and there was a special railed off space that allowed the waitresses
to access the counter and push their "dupes" onto a long spindle. These "dupes", duplicate copies of
customer orders  I assume,  were then pulled off the spindle and set up left to right over the syrup pump
bar, and checked over for fountain items and filled and placed up on the counter with the
dupe under the order when complete. That was the procedure and about eighty per cent of the fountain
production. The rest was "take out" and counter customers. When you started new, you worked  take outs
and filled cartons of ice cream to order as well as scooping ice cream onto cones for the sweltering
masses of people who had been waiting in another line. When the rush quieted down, I could observe the
owner's sons making the sundaes and waffles and ice cream and all the fancy stuff. They'd explain it all to
me and show me how to do it. It took a bit of time. Meanwhile, the two of them found time to play around
with the ice cream and stuff and the customers would laugh as they tossed it around and squirt each
other with the whipped cream bottles. They had been doing this for years and had it all down. It was a
circus. They were juggling the ice cream. You couldn't just start in and do this. These were requirements
that were strictly upper class.
Yet, here I was, at fifteen years old, finally getting into the majors. Tossing pizza dough, you know? The
 grown up world of real talent where they paid you money for playing ball. It just can't get any better than
that! So it wasn't long and all the "oohs  and aahs" were coming my way and I was eating it up. I went for
the glory. From fear and shyness, here I was now the prima uomo of  the ice cream fountain. The prodigy
- only fifteen years old and easily the fastest scoop in the east! I would learn shortly that there was more
than that to this job and work in the good ol' USA.
You think I'm kidding? I could make a chocolate nut sundae with two large scoops of ice cream, chocolate
syrup, walnuts and whipped cream in under seven seconds. I was timed. This is true. Standing start.
A black and white ice cream soda  (vanilla ice cream - two scoops - chocolate syrup, seltzer and whipped
cream in under ten seconds. That's fast my friend. The people sitting at the fountain would watch me and
I could feel their admiration and wonder. It was great! Serenity and fantasies about the "Ice Cream
Olympics" and girls of course. I was fifteen years old after all.
It was in this state of mind that I arrived at work one summer afternoon. I was thinking about getting ready
 for the evening rush. Setting up the ice cream so that it would be at exactly the right temperature that
was needed for the speed scoops we used. Too cold really slowed you down and too warm was sloppy.
There was a new fellow standing by the grille area. He was about medium height, thirty five years old or so,
very pale complexion. "Hi, I'm Bob from Chicago", I shook his hand and wondered about this strange guy
What was he, some sort of hit man or something. His Moll stood in the background, slightly taller than
Bob in a white waitress uniform. I guessed they were a couple. They had a day shift which I didn't really
have much to do with at all. The waitresses would usually get their own drinks and ice creams during the
day. I assumed they were day shift people. "We'll be working together tonight" he was short and to the
point. "I'll do the dupes, you do the take outs". He had it worked out. "Was he kidding?", I looked at it. It
took me four months to stand up under the pressure of working the dupes. And I had the "net" of the
owners'  sons right there to fall back on. I looked right at him. "Sure", I said without smiling at all. "Go
ahead."  "Yeah, go fall right on your face if that's what you want", I thought.
It turns out that the major leagues of ice cream have more than one super star. Bob could make an ice
cream soda without using a spoon. My heart totally sunk watching him pull out thirty years or so of
incredible experience, It was electrical It was all Bob. Fluorescent tan and all that time with his girl
working restaurants.  He was extremely fast. Yes, faster than even me. He was a pro. I didn't know there
was such a thing. In fact I didn't know the inside of really having to work to make a living at all. This was
an after-school job my Mom found for me.  My Mom and Dad worked of course, but they were family. It
was different. Bob was one of those guys you read about in books or saw in movies or on the TV. He and
his girlfriend were "characters". They were regulars. They belonged, were part of the social - economic
fabric of our country, like Woody Guthrie or Bonnie and Clyde. Gosh, I was not fair to them. I miss them.
I hope they're still alive and enjoying a retirement in Florida or something. Rich and healthy and with grandchildren.
After a month or so, Bob came over to me and said, "Well, you'll be glad to hear that you won't have to
put up with me any more."  He explained that he and his girlfriend were moving on. I was quietly happy
inside to get back to center stage . I shouldn't have been I should have invited them out to dinner or
something. Oh well, I was only fifteen.