Saturday, July 2, 2016

THIS & THAT #10

Don’t Follow the Leader
The past few weeks, I have been going through more than fifty-five years many years of accumulated narishkeyt (nonsense) that filled sixteen file cabinet drawers.

I attempted to either sort or shred as much hubris as possible, and started by examining the contents of file folders that were connected with my misdirected and my ill-advised choice to become advertising major in college in Michigan. I sank deeper into the business mire after I graduated in 1958, when I made a questionable segue into the real world of advertising and business. I finally escaped with my sanity mainly intact in 1969, when I began a second career as a university professor.

Go East Young Man
Beginning in November 1965 and lasting through June 1969, I served in several capacities for the Lehn & Fink Industrial Products Division of Sterling Drugs, Inc. I started in the L&F manufacturing town of Toledo, Ohio, working in offices in Lynn’s Annex, about a block away from the factory.  When I was hired as Advertising & Sales Promotion Manager, it was with the understanding that all of us in the business operations would be transferred the following spring to a new corporate building in Montvale, N. J.  I was excited to be living just a short drive from New York City.

When the move was completed, my wife Rochelle, year-old daughter Amy, our dog Troubles, our cat named Woe, and I found a rental in the lower level of an old mansion in the bucolic village of Ho-Ho-Kus, New Jersey, not far from headquarters.

We Forgot to Tell You
After the physical move was completed and we had settled in, my immediate superior, R. M. Fenner, the marketing director, invited me into his office to share what he considered good news.

Fenner told me that I was to have a new position and exciting new responsibilities as Creative Services Manager of our three industrial products divisions. John C. Johnson, who had no previous experience whatsoever in advertising and sales promotion, would now be my boss, and would inherit my previous title and job responsibilities. Johnson was brought from Toledo not because he had any special talent, but because he had worked for L&F in Toledo for twenty years, and understood how each division functioned. While I was being demoted, Fenner happily announced that the company was giving me a raise in pay.

Our three industrial product divisions sold an extensive line of both building and cleaning products in large quantities, to ensure that all areas within any business were as sanitary as can be.  They included toilet bowl cleaners, urinal blocks named Sanidomes, bug sprays and a variety of disinfectants. Lysol was the National Laboratory division’s best selling product, and in 1911, poisoning by drinking Lysol was the most common means of suicide in Australia.

Over the River
Lehn  & Fink Products was the strict and all-controlling parent company, with headquarters in New York City. Walter N. Plaut, its President, was constantly checking the goings on of all divisions, especially those in the hinterlands across the Hudson River. Of the 50,000 employees working for L&F at the time, there was only one beard in the company, and it adorned the face of the man in charge of Givenchy Perfume.

In anticipation of possible deviation from the straightforward, clean-shaven norms the company had established, just prior to the 1966 holiday season, President Plaut sent out a warning memo to all Lehn & Fink employees. It read in full, “The pressures of the holiday season have made some of us lax in our personal grooming habits. With our permanent position in the cosmetics field, it is doubly important for Lehn & Fink Management employees to be impeccably groomed at all times.

Idiosyncracies such as moustaches, beards, long sideburns, and unkempt appearances cannot be tolerated. As management of Lehn & Fink, we must be an example at all times to our fellow employees.”

Take My Razor, Too
My wife surprised me just prior to the December 1966 holiday season, which is adamantly known and defended as “Christmas” by conservatives, right-wing Christians, and GOP candidates trying to capture the Evangelical and Tea Party votes. She announced that she had purchased airline tickets for herself and our year-and-one-half-year-old daughter Amy, and was going back for the holidays to visit her Mother in Detroit.

 I was clean-shaven at the time, although I had beards before, and decided it was time to grow another one. I started it on the weekend of the 17th, and when I came to work on Monday the 19th, I had a relatively short, barely noticeable stubble. We were given an extended holiday weekend from Thursday afternoon the 22nd through Monday the 26th, and when I returned to work, I avoided meeting with people, and covered my chin whenever I walked down any corridor.  After another short workweek and an extended New Years’ weekend off, when I returned to work in early January, I decided against hiding my growth. People who saw me with the start of my now 50-year-old beard, either looked twice or did not notice it at all, but I did hear comments like, “There’s something different about you,” or “Did you lose weight?”

An Unusual Pecking Order
While Plaut detested facial hair, I learned that the head of our industrial products group had an opposite viewpoint, which he discussed with me in a session over adjoining urinals in Montvale. Jim Peck was a sixty-two-year-old, well dressed, well groomed, but not that well-informed leader, who wanted to survive at L&F until he was able to receive a full retirement package in three years.

As I was watering a Sanidome, I felt the presence of someone to my left, who said in a quiet voice, “Don’t get rid of it.” Since I was holding on to my urinary organ at the time, I told him that I had no intention of doing so.  He finished his effort, zipped up, and then looked under the door to the commode to be sure no one was there.

“No, I mean the beard,” and then he sadly confessed that he relished his vacation each year aboard his yacht, for he could grow a beard without any worry about being caught doing so.
“I’d shave it completely off before I left the yacht, but how I would have loved to keep it, but couldn’t.” He knew that he could at least be reprimanded or disciplined if he kept it, and didn’t want to do anything that might jeopardize his retirement.


 Let’s Wrap It Up
At 90 Park Avenue, Walter N. Plaut may have been the head of Lehn & Fink, however above him on the organization chart sat Glenn Johnston, the President of Sterling Drugs, Inc. Glenn was a genial gentlemen, whom I met when I won a corporation-wide photo contest in 1966. In 1967, while on a business trip, he noticed that his hotel’s toilet seat was wrapped with a paper band that listed a cleaning product that was in competition with our Lysol Liquid Toilet Bowl Cleaner.

He sent a seemingly innocuous, typed memo to Jim Peck, wondering if any of his divisions were doing anything similar to promote their products. It bore Glenn Johnston’s firm signature. Peck attached a typed cover note to Johnston’s memo, and sent it to Fenner, suggesting that he look into it as soon as possible. Fenner, in turn, scrawled his concern on this vital subject, and passed it on to my boss, John C. Johnson.

This activity had all occurred late in the previous day, and when I came in the next morning, I found the pleading package on my desk. I instantly noticed it, since John had written on the top page, “Hot! Hot! Handle Immediately!” and done so in bright red ink.

I went next door to John’s office clutching the memos, and told him that I was working on three projects that had important deadlines approaching. With a stone cold look, he replied, “It came from Park Avenue,” and dismissed me as he turned to other hot items on his desk.

I reluctantly decided to follow through, and knew that there were many motels nearby along Highway 17. I left my office to search for a solution to this penetrating problem. After an hour of driving up and down the highway, and stopping at a dozen or so motels, I had captured five toilet bowl bands, and called my wife. I told her to pack a lunch for the three of us, and that we’re going out on a picnic. She worried that I may have lost my job, but I assured her it was part of a research project I had been entrusted with by higher authority.

We had a glorious day together, enjoying a picnic, hiking and just relaxing. It stimulated my love for research. When I came into work the next morning, John C. Johnson was apoplectic, and asked what had happened to me. I proudly held up the enemy’s toilet bowl bands that I had captured, and said that I knew the importance of following through on Glenn Johnston’s memo, and spent all of the previous day doing so.

He apologized profusely for his furor, told me that I had done an excellent job, and thanked me for my efforts. I went back to my own office, put all the bands I had gathered along with the memos into a file folder, opened up a file drawer, and placed the folder in the very back. When I left L & F for academia two years later, no one had ever asked about my research endeavor and its results.  

There’s More to Come
The experience back east came during the Vietnam War years, and while corporations were fighting for greater profits, other battles raged.  We became volunteers for the Eugene McCarthy campaign for President in 1968, attended rallies and marches against the war in New York City, and wrote letters to newspapers in protest of our country’s ill-advised actions. The lack of interest within my company, inspired me to go west in 1969, and I began teaching at San Jose State, hoping to make a bigger difference in our society, other than extolling the virtues of a toilet bowl cleaner.





Wednesday, May 11, 2016

THIS & THAT #9

Donald Personally Called Me!
How Can I Not Vote for Him?
The voice message light was urgently blinking when I returned home the other day, so I pressed the “play” button, and was surprised to hear, “This is Donald Trump, and I need your help to make America great again.” Donald directly told me that “Time is short and every vote counts,” and he implored me to change my party affiliation to be able to vote for him in the Republican primary on June 7. He concluded his convincing plea with, “I want your vote and I want to make America great again.”

I wondered why the presumptive Republican nominee personally dialed my number. Perhaps he knew that when I attended his December rally at the Las Vegas Westgate Hotel, I had purchased five of his buttons. I had bought them from vendors standing outside of the rally room, and did so I could mail them to some of my far-left leaning, progressive friends on their birthdays. I put a white sticker on the back of each gift button, and wrote their name on it, followed by “Together we can make America great again,” and signed it “Donald J.”

On further discovery, I found that Donald had not called me because I attended his rally, but because my wife is registered as an “independent,” and the “Donald J. Trump for President, Incorporated 6467361779” campaign, sent Robocalls to nearly one million independents in California.

Use to Confuse
I kept a few buttons for myself, and when I visited my tax accountant, I wore my black, Johnny Cash shirt. On the left side was my “Bernie 2016” button, and the right side had a red, white and blue “TRUMP” button. The accountant seemed confused looking to the left and then the right, as he went through my financial papers.

It seems that he is not the only one confused by this election.

Bill Did It for Hillary
In one of the earlier primaries, a CNN television reporter asked a White woman in her fifties whom she planned to vote for, and she replied, “Hillary.”  When she was asked “Why?” she quickly answered, “Because Bill did so much good.”

A Black woman was asked the same initial question, and when asked why she would vote for Hillary, she said, “Because Bill personally called me and asked me to support his wife.”

Was that person so naïve to not realize that she was the recipient of a robocall, sent en masse to many potential voters? However, I know for certain that Donald J. had personally called me because I attended his rally in Las Vegas, but since I hadn’t filled out the form his campaign had handed to me, I wonder how he knew my phone number?

Trying to Out-Fox CNN
In the midst of the Indiana primary, Ted Cruz and John Kasich announced that they would work together to defeat Trump. A Fox News anchor asked the network’s reporter in Columbus, Indiana to follow Cruz, looking for a unique angle to this unusual story. With cameras following Cruz as he entered an ice cream parlor, the anchor asked the reporter the most critical question she could imagine in light of Cruz and Kasich planning to work together against Trump.  “What flavor is Cruz ordering?”


They Also Ran
Do you remember when there were seventeen Republican candidates running for their party’s Presidential nomination?

Aside from the few that stayed in the running for far too long, including John, Ted, Mario, Carly, Ben, Jeb, Jim, Chris, Rick, Rand, Mike and Donald J., name the other pretenders in the order of their withdrawal.

You might not have even remembered who Jim was, but you will find out about him and the five other semi-serious candidates by looking at the closing paragraphs below entitled, “They Threw Their Hats Into the Ring.”


They Threw Their
Hats Into the Ring**
The headline’s expression comes from the early 19th century, when boxing was popular. Anyone who wanted to challenge a fighter would throw his hat into the boxing ring, which was square and not round. The phrase came to be used first to mean to “enter a contest,” and then a political contest, when in 1912 Theodore “Teddy” Roosevelt uttered, “My hat’s in the ring,” when he entered that Presidential race.

Apparently Teddy’s hat was too small, for while he received more votes that Socialist Presidential candidate Eugene Debs and his running mate Emil Seidel, and more than Republican Presidential candidate William Howard Taft and his running mate Nicholas M. Butler, Teddy finished with only 88 electoral votes as the Progressive Party candidate, far behind the electoral 435 votes garnered by the Democratic Party candidate Woodrow Wilson and his running mate Thomas R. Marshall. Teddy’s downfall may have been his party’s selection for vice-president of Hiram Johnson, whose mother was Annie DeMontfredy, a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution.
** Feel free to use the expression in simplified Chinese 宣布参宣布参

What About This Year?

The other 2016 GOP candidates who withdrew earlier were George Pataki, Lindsay Graham, Bobby Jindal, Scott Walker, and Rick Perry. All but Lindsay had been a governor of their state, and the missing “Jim” was Governor Gilmore, who led Virginia from 1998 to 2002.




Sunday, April 3, 2016

THIS & THAT #8

What Is Democracy In America?

Both the Republican National Committee and its counterpart, the Democratic National Committee, appear to be acting against the precepts of a democracy.

According to the Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “democracy” is defined as “a form of government in which people choose leaders by voting.”

The RNC Does Not Believe
Apparently the RNC’s leader Reince Priebus and his committee as well as the DNC’s leader Debbie Wasserman Schultz and her committee, are unaware of the latter part of that definition — “in which people choose leaders by voting.”

The RNC is furiously trying to come up with a campaign to deny Donald Trump the chance of being their nominee for President of the United States. This is despite the fact that he has the most delegates to date based on people’s votes, and they will try to deny him, even if he has the 1,237 delegates needed for the nomination.

Neither Does the DNC
The Democrats seem to be even more adamant in trying to eliminate any pretense that their race for the nomination is anything more than a giant sham, with the odds stacked against anyone not named Clinton.

The Democrat nominee has to garner 2,383 delegate votes, and as of today, Hillary has 1,243 pledged delegates, and Bernie Sanders has 980. But the Democratic Party also has made sure that Clinton has 469 “superdelegates,” while Sanders has only 31.

This gives Clinton a total of 1,712 delegates, while Sanders has 1,011. Even with the conniving DNC working overtime to make her the nominee, there are still  2.042 delegates available.

Why “conniving,” you may ask. The DNC knew that both Billary and Hillary had worked the Black scene during the years, so they were quite pleased that many early primaries took place in Southern states, or states with heavily Black populations.  Hillary took an early lead when she won more delegates in South Carolina, Alabama, Arkansas, Georgia, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia. 

It is estimated that the 712 “superdelegates” represent 15 percent of the total. They include President Obama, Joe Biden, 239 Democratic members of the House and Senate, 21 sitting governors,  437 DNC members, and a questionable category known as “distinguished party leaders.”

The voters in primaries or caucuses do not choose these delegates, but “superdelegates” have an opportunity to elect the party’s nominee only because they are members of the elite upper echelon of Democrats.

The RNC and DNC Together
Finally, with all of the acrimony shown now and will be shown during the general election campaign, there is a movement that both parties are working on in obtuse harmony. Sadly, that is to obliterate Webster’s definition of “democracy.”

The Voices of the People
One woman said that although she doesn’t like Trump’s attitude towards women and minorities, she will vote for him because he was a good businessman.

Another voter told a television reporter that she’s voting for Hillary because Bill called her, not understanding that it was a Robocall. Another woman echoed her choice of Hillary, because she remembers what good Bill did while in office.

A Site To Make Eyes Sore
Picture President Hillary sleeping with Bill as he whispers policy in her ears, but only on nights when he isn’t sleeping with a female or male intern.