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Home > Reporting, Writing & Editing
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4:33 PM  Oct. 31, 2005
Reading the Paper
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FATHER'S DAY COLLECTION

Some fathers are journalists
(even Pulitzer winners); others can be best known through newspapers or their love of them. Whoever your father, we hope you'll find something of him and of yourself in these essays by Roy Peter Clark, Anne Conneen, Karen F. Brown Dunlap, Rob King, Christopher Scanlan, and Richard H. Weiss.

By Christopher Scanlan (more by author)


(This essay appeared originally in The American Scholar, Spring 2003 issue and was selected as a "Notable Essay of 2004" in Best American Essays edited by Louis Menand and Robert Atwan. )

Five days before my father died, the Greenwich High School chorus performed at a convention of music educators in Atlantic City. Their repertoire, ranging from Haydn's Missa Brevis in B flat Major to Aaron Copland's "Stomp Your Foot," so impressed a European visitor that he invited the singers to perform in Vienna the following summer.

Two days before my father died, Rosemary Clooney gave birth to a baby boy in Santa Monica, California.

The day before my father died, two armed convicts, Robert Rivera and Raymond Farra, released 19 hostages they had threatened to kill, ending a 25-hour siege at the Tennessee Penitentiary in Nashville.

The night before my father died, a dog fell through the ice on a pond off Stanwich Road. Pamela Shaw, a teenager who lived nearby, heard it bark and came running, but the dog slipped under the ice before she could reach it. In Willimantic, Connecticut, an 8-year-old boy ran into the path of a car and was killed.

That night, at the Innis Arden Golf Club, the Old Greenwich Lions gave the Boy Scouts a thousand-dollar check to spruce up their camp, while the Byram Veterans Association met in their Delavan Avenue clubhouse to plan the group's annual spring dance and buffet.

I know these things because they were all reported in the Greenwich Time, my hometown newspaper, on Friday, March 25, 1960. I've been spending a lot of time lately reading this edition, trying to master its contents and structure, hoping, I think, that this exegesis will help me to understand a dimly remembered day when I was 10 years old.

Newspapers are a roaming consciousness, like a spy satellite circling hundreds of miles above earth, able to spot a dog slipping under the ice in a back-country pond and to capture the moment when an escaped convict emerges from hostage negotiations, his arms raised.

This particular newspaper, retrieved from a roll of microfilm in the Greenwich Library, consists of 20 black-and-white broadsheet pages, of which only about half are devoted to current events on a very slow news day. An index on the front page guides readers through the rest: obituaries, movie and television listings, weather, and the crossword puzzle, along with four pages of classified advertising, two pages of sports, and a page of comics.

Three months into the new decade, it offers few hints of the turbulence ahead. To be sure, there are stories about A-bomb tests, the still-simmering TV quiz show scandals, racial unrest in South Africa and the American South. Other harbingers of the sixties are nowhere to be found — nary a hint of sex or drugs, not even of rock and roll. Dwight D. Eisenhower is still president, women are identified by their husbands' names, and the musical guest on "The Ed Sullivan Show" that Sunday will be Teresa Brewer, whose big hit — "Till I Waltz Again with You" — had topped the charts in 1953.

In any case, the news stories interest me far less than other items scattered throughout the paper -- police briefs, press releases, ads, school-lunch menus, personal notices, birth announcements, and death notices — that trigger a return to a time and place that exist now only in scattered memories.

obit
When this paper appeared, I was 10 years old and just beginning a new life as a fatherless boy in a Connecticut suburb where men came home at night, borne on the 5:36 from Grand Central, weary from the hunt among the pin-striped dragons of the metropolis, their own battle raiment creased and wrinkled, to reclaim their places of honor in country castles.

Almost immediately, I became a charity case — dependent on scholarships, paltry Social Security death benefits, and the kindness of others — and a servant who would, in the years to come, deliver this newspaper and bag groceries, shoulder golf bags and cut lawns in the summer, rake leaves in the fall, and shovel snow-banked sidewalks in winter, quickly absorbing the relationship between fawning courtesy and the size of a gratuity.

I don't really care that A. P. Mazza, the former Democratic state central committeeman, was interested in that post again, but not enough to fight for it. But I am fascinated to learn that March 25 was "Smart Shopper Time" at Partridge & Rockwell, where the values included a Frigidaire automatic washer with a "Special New Automatic Soak Cycle" for $219.95 ("with trade-in"), and I'm captivated by the best deal at Town Hall Radio & TV: an "all-new" Zenith twenty-one-inch, black-and-white, swivel-console TV with remote Zenith Space Command.

I couldn't care less that, in Washington the day before, government officials declared "No Recession Before '61." But I find it immensely intriguing that, with a gallon of Dutch Boy Nalplex Acrylic Latex Wall Paint, McDermott Paint and Wallpaper was giving away a Dutch Boy hand puppet, valued at $1.39!

Elsewhere in the world there was trouble — earthquake in Switzerland, bomb scares in Baltimore, actors and writers on strike in Hollywood — but there was little to break the bubble of peace and prosperity in Greenwich.

In that verdant place, pockmarked with ponds, streams, and lakes, and ringed by marshes and miles of shoreline along Long Island Sound, the replacement of a mosquito control worker, for unspecified "unsatisfactory reasons," was important enough to merit front-page play. But I'm more interested in the take-home specials at the Dairy Queen in Cos Cob: forty cents for a pint of ice cream (vanilla, chocolate, strawberry, or fresh banana) — four pints for $1.25 — or that the price for six ιclairs, eight Dilly Bars, or eleven ice cream sandwiches was $1.00.

Price tags abound, a bittersweet index of consumer prices ($3.95 for a full-course Del Monico Steak Dinner, $1,645 for a new Renault, $14.98 for a woman's dress made from the latest miracle fabric, Arnel triacetate). I look at these ads and marvel at how cheap things were back then, and then I wonder: How broke was my family that they were so out of reach?

>>Read Next: Classifieds..........................16-19


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