Saturday, November 26, 2016

Best of Intentions, Chapter 5

Ben leaves his school late one rainy afternoon near dusk.  He opens his umbrella.  Behind him a figure approaches with a familiar voice.  Marilyn, a math teacher, slim, not unattractive, single, wears glasses. 
"Ben, wait up." 
He turns, stops and waits for her.  Instead of an umbrella, she's wearing a scarf to protect her long brown hair.
"Could you escort a damsel in distress to her home?"
"Sure."
Marilyn pulls up close to Ben, takes his arm and gets under his umbrella.  They head to the east side of Oswego where they both live.  After walking together across the Bridge Street Bridge and through the East Side Park, they arrive at Marilyn's modest two story house.  She unlocks the kitchen door. 
"Why don't you come in?  I've leftover meatloaf...plenty for two.  I owe you for being such a gentleman.  And I won't take no for an answer."
Ben thought for a second or two.  This would not be the first time he had been in Marilyn's house.  He was hungry and he would have to prepare dinner for himself at home if he refused her hospitality.
"All right."
Ben and Marilyn enter the kitchen, remove their coats, and shake off the rain. 
"Ben, why don't you make yourself comfortable in the living room.  We can eat while listening to some music on the radio."
After she warms up the food in the oven, the two of them eat from trays sitting side by side on the sofa.  After finishing, Ben puts his tray on the nearby coffee table and starts to rise.
"Thanks a lot, Marilyn.  That was great.  I've got to go.  Tests to grade.  You understand."
She removes her glasses and pulls him back.  "Not yet."
Marilyn puts her arms around him and plants a hard kiss on his mouth.  He responds in kind.  After some seconds, they separate.
"I'm going upstairs to get more comfortable.  Give me a couple of minutes and then join me."
Marilyn gets up from the sofa without taking her eyes off Ben.  She walks up the stairs, still maintaining eye contact with him.  Ben waits for some minutes, all the while thinking of a choice he's about to make.  Finally, he follows Marilyn up the stairs.  He then walks to the doorway of her bedroom, a place not unfamiliar to him.  She is lying in her bed wearing nothing but a light blue transparent negligee.  The covers are open to receive him.  He stays by the open door.
"I can't, Marilyn.  I'm not in love with you.  I need that."
"We both deserve some warmth and affection, Ben.  I can make you happy.  I need that."
"I'm sorry.  Good night."
Ben turns around and walks back down the stairs.  He continues through the living room, the kitchen and out the door he entered.  All the while, Marilyn remains frozen on her bed. 
When Ben arrives at his house, he sees an envelope lying on the floor in front of the mail chute by the front door.  By the return address, he sees it is from Rita, which brings a smile to his face.
That same night, Jon, from U.S. Army Intelligence, is meeting with his superior, General Wharton, at the Pentagon, just outside of Washington, D.C.
"General, I believe that someone in the president's inner circle should know about Karchevsky.  Let them decide what to do about it."
"Let me review your report, Jon.  I'll figure out who and when.  I'll let you know.  Good job."
 
 

Saturday, November 19, 2016

Planes, Trains and Automobiles

My favorite holiday is Thanksgiving, which will be this coming Thursday, the 24th.  It is not religious (Christmas) nor patriotic (Independence Day).  Its essence is friends and family coming together to share a turkey dinner and appreciate the good things in their lives.

Thanksgiving has become a holiday in which more Americans travel to get home or to wherever they are celebrating than any other time of the year.  As it falls on a Thursday (the fourth in November as mandated by President Abraham Lincoln in 1863), it has lately been expanding from a four-day holiday to a five-plus-day celebration.

As a child, Thanksgiving represented days off from school, having to eat my mother's very dry turkey at our dining room table (instead of in the kitchen where we normally ate), topped off with three different kinds of pies (apple, pumpkin and lemon meringue) for dessert, and the Lions-Packers annual pro football game on our black-and-white TV.

As an adult, I discovered that turkey can be moist and delicious.  Plus, cranberry sauce can be freshly made instead of spooned out of a can.  Bonita and I took our children to Broadway in front of the Ed Sullivan Theater to watch the Macy's Thanksgiving parade in person.  There were trips to our friend Donna's house in rural Connecticut for gourmet food.  I cooked my first turkey when my son, Bret, came to visit me in Chapel Hill.  When I was going to be alone my last Thanksgiving before moving to Brazil, I remember the kindness of my OSR colleague, Karen Mansfield, who invited me to her home. Now I cook a 1 kg. boneless turkey breast, pre-seasoned, in order to celebrate Thankgiving in Sao Paulo.
Planes, Trains and Automobiles, written, produced, and directed by John Hughes in 1987, is my favorite Thanksgiving movie.  It starred my "friend" Steve Martin (see blog post of 10/4/2015-Parenthood) and the late John Candy as two strangers who meet while trying to get home to Chicago for Thanksgiving.  Everything that could possibly go wrong, goes wrong.  But it's a comedy.

Neal (Martin), an advertising executive, is finishing a business trip to New York and is struggling to get home for Thanksgiving on time.  He pays a man on the street to give up his taxi, but Del (Candy), a salesman, unknowingly takes the taxi away from him and heads to the airport.  As such, Neal is peeved.  What a coincidence when they sit next to each other on the same plane flying to Chicago.  Neal's first impression carries over, while Del tries to make amends. 

Because of a blizzard, the plane is diverted to Wichita, Kansas.  That night, Neal (grudgingly) and Del are forced to share a room and a bed in a cheap motel.  While they are sleeping, a burglar steals all their money.  Thinking the worst, Neal is sure that Del was the thief, but is finally convinced otherwise.  The next day, Neal and Del board a train bound for Chicago.  More bad luck as the engine breaks down stranding all the passengers in the middle of a field in rural Missouri. 

Neal and Del walk to nearby Jefferson City where they buy (after Del sells all his samples) bus tickets to St. Louis whereupon Neal happily (for him) parts company with Del.  At the St. Louis airport, Neal rents a car, but when he is dropped off at his designated location, there is no car waiting for him.  However, always amenable Del rescues Neal with his own rented car. 

While driving the wrong way on the freeway, Del almost gets them killed.  Later, the car catches fire.  All their credit cards having been burned, Neal has to sell his designer watch to pay for a motel room for himself, while Del tries to sleep in his burnt-out car parked in the motel parking lot.  Finally feeling compassion for Del, Neal invites him into his room for the night.  The next day, their car is impounded by the police because of the fire damage, but the two are able to finally get to Chicago in the back of a refrigerator truck (thanks to Del). 

Neal and Del part company at a train station in the city.  While Neal is happily heading home, he comes to the realization that Del may be alone for the holiday.  Neal returns to the station and finds Del still there.  Del admits that his wife died eight years before and he has no where to go.  Understanding the essence of this holiday (see above), Neal invites his new friend, Del, to his home where he will share Thanksgiving dinner with his family.  It is a fitting end to an otherwise funny story. 
  

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Electoral College

In November of the year 2000, Vice President Al Gore (Democrat) received 543,892 more popular votes than did Texas Governor George W. Bush (Republican), thus winning the U. S. presidential election.  Gore was inaugurated the following January 20th to become the 43rd president of the United States of America. 

Part of the above is not true.  Gore was not inaugurated as president.  Bush was.  Gore did not win the election even though he did receive more votes than Bush, popular votes that is.   Unfortunately for Gore, Bush received the majority of the electoral votes, 271 to 266.  Why this mismatch between popular votes and electoral votes?  What is the Electoral College, where the electoral votes are cast, all about?   

In Brazil, there is no Electoral College.  The candidate with a majority of the popular vote becomes the president of the Brazilian Republic.  If there is initially no candidate with a majority, there is a second round of voting with only the two top candidates from the first round, thus insuring that one will receive a majority.  So why is the USA different?

Under the Twelfth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States of America, "The Electors shall meet in their respective states, and vote by ballot for President...and transmit (list of votes) sealed to the seat of government of the United States...The person having the greatest Number of votes for President, shall be President, if such number be a majority of the whole number of Electors appointed." 

The way the U. S. system works, which ever candidate for President receives the most popular votes in each of the fifty states (even if not a majority), the Electors pledged (but not legally bound) to vote for that candidate will cast their electoral vote in the Electoral College where the actual election takes place.  Thus, there is not a national election in the United States, but fifty state (plus the District of Columbia) elections.

Those who wrote the Constitution in the 1780s were worried about giving the people the power to directly choose their president.  Perhaps they could be too easily duped by the promises of a candidate.  President Lincoln allegedly said that "You can fool all the people some of the time and some of the people all the time." Thus, the Electoral College system was intended to act as a safeguard.  It was also intended to give smaller, more rural states more influence in the election process.  

There are 100 Senators and 435 Representatives in the U. S. Congress.  As such, there are a total of 535 Electoral Votes allocated among the 50 States.  The District of Columbia (Washington, D.C.) does not have any Senators, nor does it have a voting member in the House of Representatives.  However, under the Twenty-Third Amendment to the U. S. Constitution, the District of Columbia is allocated 3 Electoral votes, making it equal to the number allocated to the smallest state in the USA.  Thus, there are 538 electoral votes; a majority would be 270, the number necessary to elect a president of the United States of America.
It is fair to say that 103 (100 for the Senators and 3 for D.C.) out of the 538 Electoral votes (about 19%) are unrelated to the relative size of the population of the fifty states.  Furthermore, the winner take all system in each of the states (except Maine and Nebraska) also diminishes the significance of receiving the most popular votes nationally.   

And what if there is a tie, 269-269?  And what if a third-party candidate wins some electoral votes, thus preventing either of the major party candidates from winning a majority?  That is the subject of another blog post. 

As a result of the election this past Tuesday, the 8th of November, Donald Trump received 306 (including Michigan) electoral votes (a majority) and will be inaugurated on January 20, 2017 as the 45th president of the United States of America. 

On the other hand, similar to the year 2000, Secretary Hillary Clinton, his Democratic Party opponent, received 2,654,370 more popular votes than Trump (on election night 2012, Trump tweeted that the Electoral College was a "disaster for a democracy"), but lost the election.  It is interesting, but perhaps meaningless, to note that in six out of the last seven presidential elections the Democratic Party candidate received more popular votes.  The exception being 2004.  However, as we have seen, twice during this period a Republican overcame that disadvantage to win the presidency in the Electoral College.    

I hope for the best for my country over the next four years under President Trump.     

       

Thursday, November 10, 2016

Donald Trump

From September of 1966 until May of 1967, I was in my senior year as a student at the Wharton School of Finance and Commerce, part of the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia.  Eliminating my health concerns and worries about how the Vietnam War would affect my post-graduation prospects (see my blog post of May 8, 2016 - Fifty Years), I would say that my senior year was blissful in comparison to my first three years at Penn.
 
As I had taken four courses during Summer School in 1964, I only had to take the minimum four courses per semester my senior year.  As such, my work load was reduced.  Because I had gotten good grades my junior year, I was no longer stressed about the possibility of not graduating on time.
 
My only other unfulfilled graduation requirement was passing a swimming test (swimming across a 50 meter pool).  As I was not much of a swimmer at the time, I went to see the Director of Physical Education, George Munger, who, without my even asking, gave me a waiver for the swimming requirement.  Munger had been Penn's most successful football coach up to that time winning 65% of his teams' games from 1938 to 1953.

Unfortunately, I was still living in a dormitory thanks to my father's lack of encouragement and my own cowardice.  After our sophomore year, my friend, Scott Kahn, and I agreed to room together in an off campus apartment for our final two years at Penn.  While I was at home that summer of 1965, Scott stayed in Philadelphia looking for an apartment.
 
When Scott found one, he sent me a copy of the lease for me to sign.  When I showed it to my father, who needed to pay my share of the rent, he told me that the landlord was a crook who would take advantage of me.  I learned that my father was speaking from ignorance, never having seen a lease like that.  He told me he would pay the rent, but if anything else happened, I was on my own.  I failed to be brave and take a chance.  Scott lived at the apartment for two years without any serious problems.  When my children were in the same situation years later, I was supportive of them as I wished my father would have been with me.

I think my favorite course that senior year was an introductory one in real estate.  I learned its three rules:  location, location, and location.  Our professor had us study an actual neighborhood in West Philadelphia, not far from the campus.  Each student was given an address of a house in the neighborhood and had to do various research related to the house.  One was to go to Philadelphia City Hall (intersection of Broad and Market Streets) and look up the last three times the house had been sold (using old fashioned microfilm) to certify that each owner had signed on the subsequent sales document.  This is what title insurance is about.

Some time during that senior year, a colleague mentioned that one of our fellow students was Donald Trump, the son of a wealthy New York City real estate developer.  He was a junior transfer from Fordham University in New York City.  Trump was at Penn because of the real estate program that the Wharton School offered.  He graduated 12 months after I did in May of 1968.

Donald Trump was born June 14, 1946 in Jamaica Estates, Queens, into a family of five children (three boys and two girls).  He attended the Kew-Forest School, a local private school, until age thirteen.  In 1959, his parents sent Trump to the New York Military Academy, a private boarding school in the rural village of Cornwall-on-Hudson, New York, about 60 miles north of New York City.  (My mother threatened to send me to a similar school, the Manlius Military School in DeWitt, New York.)  Trump graduated from the New York Military Academy in 1964.  Then came Fordham and Penn.  As we both took a course or courses in Penn's Real Estate Department, our paths may have crossed, but if they did, I wouldn't have known who he was by sight.

I need to put the kibosh on one rumor that was attributed to both Candice Bergen, the actress who entered Penn with my freshman class in 1963, and Trump.  They dated while they were both students at  Penn?  Not possible!  [I saw a video interview with her and she stated that at the time of their date, he was not a student at Penn] She left in the spring of 1965 because a lack of good grades (too busy with a modeling career) and he did not arrive until the fall of the following year, 1966.

It is little known, but two years after his Penn graduation, Trump invested $70,000 in a Broadway show called Paris is Out, becoming one of its producers.  The comedy closed after 96 performances (about 12 weeks).  A year later, he took over his father's real estate business.  

In June of 2015, Trump announced that he was a candidate for president of the United States.  In July of this year, he received the nomination of the Republican Party.  The presidential election will be this coming Tuesday, the 8th of November.  What ever happens, I hope for the best for my country.