Categories
Life

Line ’em up

Forty years ago today, Richard Nixon resigned the presidency and Gerald Ford was sworn in to succeed him. Tom DeFrank, a reporter who covered both Nixon and Ford extensively, writes in The Atlantic about what it was like to report on Watergate in the five days that culminated in Nixon’s resignation.

Like millions of people, I watched via TV as Nixon lifted off from the White House aboard Marine One. My vantage point was the living room floor of an apartment in Pittsburgh’s Squirrel Hill section that belonged to my aunt and uncle and cousin. I don’t remember whether they had a black-and-white or color TV, but I do recall that an air conditioner occupied one window in the room.

My 11-year-old mind grasped that something had happened that mattered in the scope of American history. I suppose that was why I watched, as opposed to reading a book or playing outside, which is how I spent most summer days.

During the run-up to Nixon’s resignation my father had watched the evening news, which was filled with reports of a president in trouble and a nation in crisis. “He could give an illegal order,” I recall someone on television saying. That is, the president could go rogue. I did not comprehend fully that, in many ways, he had already.

My aunt, a native of the Bronx who moved to Pittsburgh when she married, gave me a snack, maybe ice cream or cherries. Something nice that seemed like summertime.

Still, being in the city felt confining. It afforded fewer places to play than our house in a small-town subdivision, about 30 miles away. The city has parks, of course, but going to the park required intention and the company of an adult. My 9-year-old sister and I lacked the know-how to navigate the city on our own.

So there I sat, watching a constitutional crisis resolve.

Ahead to 1997, when I first heard “Line ‘Em Up,” a song by James Taylor about Nixon’s farewell to the White House staff. I listened to it repeatedly  while driving from Chicago to Milwaukee to Madison to Minneapolis to Fargo.

The song now reminds me of the upper Midwest, of being 11, and of an apartment in the city on an August day.

Categories
Life

Butler Library, July 28

The view from my chair in Butler Library on Monday, July 28, a day before the New York bar exam.library

Categories
Law Life

As Churchill said…

winston

“If you’re going through hell, keep going.”

What’s inspiring me as I study for the New York bar exam.

Categories
Home Life

On taking notes

In an article recently for The New Yorker, the writer John McPhee describes some of his experiences over the course of more than 50 years of interviewing people, including Special Agent Ronald Rawalt, a mineralogist from the FBI whose work in Mexico solved the murder of an American drug agent there; the actor Richard Burton, who “interviewed himself,” according to McPhee; and Alan Hume, M.D., a surgeon in Maine who “talked clearly, rapidly, volubly, and technically.”

McPhee has some advice for anyone who makes a living that involves recording what other people say. “Whatever you do, don’t rely on memory,” he writes. “Don’t imagine that you will be able to remember in the evening what people said during the day.” Good point, in my experience, as limited as it may be compared with McPhee’s. Even when I’m not on deadline, I make it a practice to read my notes the same day I’ve interviewed someone, as a way to reflect on what he or she told me, to identify gaps in my understanding and to decipher the scrawl that I tend to produce when I’m scribbling.

Lots of people take notes but journalists may be the only ones for whom writing down what other people tell us is the work itself. In December I met Bohlale Ratefane, a woman who works the lost luggage counter for South African Airways at Johannesburg’s Tambo airport. Ratefane wrote notes to herself in a black notebook with a worn cover while juggling both a BlackBerry and a smartphone. She wrote in the notebook seemingly at random, back and forth among the pages, but the system must have made sense to her because she found the entry she needed every time. She worked the notebooks and phones to perfection in pursuit of her prey, which included suitcases and passports that had become separated from their owners.

Recently I came across a story that I wrote two autumns go, during a football game between Columbia and Dartmouth that I had gone to cover for a class at journalism school. The draft had been piled among a series of notes that I’ve carried with me since then as I’ve traveled from New York City to South Africa and back.

About midway through the fourth quarter on that Saturday in October, I wandered over to the Big Green’s side of the stands, where I met Elliott Olshansky. I had sought out Olshansky because he and a cluster of fans cheered for Dartmouth on nearly every play. As it happened, Olshansky graduated from Dartmouth in 2004 and aspired to be a writer and an entrepreneur. “I’m in this weird limbo between where I am and where I want to be,” he told me.

I liked his comment and used it in my first draft of the story. My professor also liked the comment but suggested that I discard it nonetheless. “It doesn’t really advance your central point,” he wrote in tracked changes through the middle of the paragraph. My professor was right about the quote. The story was tighter without it.

Still, I’m glad I’ve preserved that first draft of the story long enough to read Olshansky’s comment anew. That’s because the in-between state that Olshansky described himself as occupying has become a home of sorts to me. I’ve recently returned to New York from South Africa to work on a project that combines my training in law and journalism. But I also look forward in August to returning to South Africa, where there are stories that I want to report and write, and where my partner lives and works.

When I met Olshansky he had recently published an e-book about the rules of dating from a guy’s perspective. “Guy-lit,” according to Olshansky, who also was pursuing an MBA at Fordham. Aspiring entrepreneur and writer – that was where Olshansky stood as we parted on that sunny afternoon, when I did not yet realize his observation might one day resonate with me.

Writing in my notebook what Olshansky said and discovering the quote anew 18 months later underscores for me another reason one writes things down in the first place. Mostly we take notes to remember, but the notes that we take also help us to see things in new ways. Our drafts may be a means to an end, but they become a part of us too.

 

Categories
Life

A laundry in Brooklyn on a Monday evening in March

laundryMonday evening at the laundromat, corner of Lorimer St. and Graham Ave. in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn.

“Hello, hon, how can I help you?” the  lady on duty asked me as she folded t-shirts piled atop a blue plastic table. “Cold wash is $1. Warm wash, $2.50.” My fleece, which has a tag recommending that the garment be washed in cold water, decided.

I changed a $5 bill, loaded my laundry into a machine and sat down to finish a story in latest issue of The New Yorker about the movie “Noah,” by Darren Aronofsky, who, as it happens, grew up about 15 miles from the laundromat. I stared through the portal of the washing machine and imagined life aboard the arc as water inundated my clothes.

House Rules:

  • When cycle is finished, laundry left unattended in washers or dryers may be removed by the next waiting customers.
  • Check machines before loading items and please clean the machines after each use.
  • Kindly wipe clean any bleach or soap from tops of machines when finished.
  • We assume no responsibility for damaged, lost or stolen articles.
  • Absolutely no tinting or dyeing in any machines.
  • No sneakers, plastic or rubber items permitted in machines.
  • Do not remove laundry carts from store.
  • No pets or bicycles permitted in store.
  • No alcoholic beverages allowed.
  • No smoking.

A woman to my left in a hoodie typed on a MacBook Pro. A woman in black to her left knitted. “The Bachelor” played on one of two 55-inch televisions on the wall. Something about a single guy who brings a series of women home to meet his family. From the other screen poured a telenovela.

Categories
Life

Car Talk: Part III

discI returned to Class Auto in Pietermaritzburg on Wednesday afternoon for another test to determine whether my partner’s Land Rover deserved a designation of roadworthy. Our Land Rover specialist, Steve, had repaired each of 10 defects inspectors  flagged in January.

This was a second run at roadworthy. The Land Rover had earned it in November, but my partner and I squandered the status – a requirement for registering a vehicle in South Africa – by failing to register the Land Rover within 60 days. When I returned to Class Auto in January with the vehicle, its roadworthy status hinged, in the view of the inspector on duty that day, on our making the 10 repairs. Steve agreed to do the work and I resolved not to let the certification, if we were able to earn it anew, lapse again.

Now back at Class Auto, I forked over the fee of about $30 (the third time we would pay for testing). The Indian man behind the counter asked for my keys and offered me a seat on a vinyl sofa that lines one wall of the office. Within about five minutes, an inspector entered the room, retrieved the keys and headed out to the Land Rover, which he proceeded to drive into a shed where he and his colleagues would poke at the vehicle until satisfied.

While I waited, I read something about Beyoncé in a stale copy of People and glanced up occasionally to check on the Land Rover. At one interval I saw its tail lights illuminate, first the right one then the left, as the inspectors worked their way around the vehicle and down their checklist. I wanted to photograph the scene but I didn’t dare for fear the man in the office think me an undercover inspector and withhold a roadworthy designation for a second time.

Instead I fiddled with my iPhone and waited for what felt like 20 minutes. A Zulu guy joined me on the sofa while inspectors scoured his four-wheel-drive vehicle. Then the inspector who had tested the Land Rover returned to the office, plopped the keys on the counter and handed a green form to his colleague, a woman who stood on the other side of the shelf.

“Who’s Land Rover?” she called to the two of us without looking up. “That’s mine,” I answered. “It’s passed,” she said. “Just give us five minutes for the paperwork.”

Passed. My face felt flush as relief coursed through me. As promised, the woman handed me a form that proclaimed the Land Rover to be roadworthy. I headed out into the sunshine and texted Steve. “Passed,” I typed. “Thanks, Steve!” “Brilliant!” came the reply a moment later.

I also emailed my partner. “Whose Land Rover?” read the subject line of the message, which recounted the moment the woman told me the Land Rover had passed. “Did you see my message,” I asked my partner excitedly when she arrived home that evening. She hadn’t seen it, which gave me license to deliver the news to her anew. “We’ll need to go together in the morning to register the vehicle,” I added.

That demanded speed. My partner and I were scheduled to fly to New York the following day. I would not be returning to South Africa for six months. My partner would be back in 14 days but said she would be too busy to register the vehicle then. That left Thursday morning before we headed to the airport.

The next day at about 7:30 a.m. we headed to One-Stop Licensing, a business in Pietermaritzburg that, for a fee of about $8, handles paperwork one needs for registration. With my partner beside me in the Land Rover, I pulled out of our street and drove to the N3, the highway that connects Johannesburg and Durban, for the roughly seven-mile trip to One-Stop.

Trouble loomed as soon as we entered the highway. All three lanes were jammed and traffic had slowed to a speed of about 5 mph. About 1,000 feet ahead a police car had parked at a 45-degree angle in the center lane, forcing traffic to move left or right and intensifying the congestion. As we rolled, my partner, who had worked all night and had yet to pack, began to fret. “I can’t do this,” she said, covering her eyes with her hand. “I have two presentations and a meeting in Boston and I haven’t even packed yet. I can’t do that in an hour.”

My partner’s misgivings and the tie-up on the N3 left me wondering if my determination to register the Land Rover had exceeded the bounds of common sense. Then we received what in retrospect seems to have been a sign from a higher power. A pickup stuck in the jam about four vehicles ahead of us turned right onto the grass that separates the eastbound and westbound lanes and pulled back onto the highway heading in the opposite direction. The remedy was one that drivers who are stuck in traffic resort to sometimes after determining that the benefits of freeing themselves outweigh the costs of an illegal move.

We resolved to do the same. That’s when a Land Rover, with its clearance, comes in handy. I rolled the vehicle onto the median as my partner talked me through the maneuver. “All clear,” she said as she looked toward the westbound lanes. I shifted into second, heaved the vehicle up onto the roadway and accelerated.

We had escaped the jam but still had an unregistered vehicle. “Take Old Howick,” said my partner, referring to a route that would allow us to avoid the highway. “Are you sure,” I asked, fearful of encountering more traffic at what by then become had rush hour between Hilton and Pietermaritzburg. “Just go,” she said.

Off we went, down Old Howick, which descends a mountain from Hilton into Pietermaritzburg. Happily for us the traffic moved and we arrived at One-Stop around 8:45 a.m.

We headed into the whitewashed building that serves as One-Stop’s offices, where we encountered no queue at the counter. “I’m back,” I said eagerly to the woman who manages the shop. “I obtained the roadworthy just as you advised.”

I’m not sure the woman remembered me but she smiled as I spread the forms for registration on the counter. “My partner is here and she has her passport and two photos,” I added proudly, as if I might get extra credit for doing something required.

For her part, my partner stepped to the counter and laid her passport and photos beside the forms. At last, I thought. We’re here and this is happening.

My partner had brought the two photos because One-Stop had told me she would need them to apply for a traffic registration number, an identifier the South African government issues to drivers. “How long will this take,” my partner asked. “We are flying today.”

“Today,” asked the woman. “This takes about two hours. But there’s no queue at the registration office, which is in the building behind us. You can go over there and handle this directly. Otherwise, we’ll walk your application over there but that could take two hours until we drop the application off and pick it up.”

The woman’s colleague, a nice young Zulu woman, offered to escort us to the licensing office, which is housed in a temporary structure about 100 yards behind One-Stop. “OK,” I said. “Please walk over with us so we don’t get lost.” Though we would have to have closed our eyes to miss the destination, I feared anything that might derail our effort.

classTogether with the woman, my partner and I headed out of One-Stop, into the sunshine, out the gate and up the road one stop to the licensing bureau. “If are able to register this vehicle I will hug you,” I said to the woman, who smiled. “This has been a journey.”

Once inside the woman approached one of the clerks, who sit behind glass that resembles a bank. “First you’ll get the traffic identification number, then if you’d like, you can register the vehicle,” our guide told us. “May I find you if there’s a problem,” I asked her, not wanting her to abandon us. “Yes, that’s OK, but you should be fine,” she said.

After about five minutes my partner got to the window, where the clerk, a Zulu woman who wore reading glasses, examined my partner’s passport. “This is expired,” the clerk said. “Expired,” asked my partner as we each gasped. “No, not expired,” said my partner, pointing to a page. “See here.”

window

The clerk looked at the page then smiled. “I’m here for 14 years but I go back and forth to the states because that’s where the funders are who let me do work in South Africa,” said my partner.

“Better there,” said the woman.

“No, not better,” said my partner. “Cold. Better here.”

“How great is this,” I said to my partner while the woman sifted through varied forms, occasionally entering information into a computer. “I love places like this. This is where the business of the country happens.”

“I would give anything not to have to do this,” my partner replied.

The woman smiled and continued to stamp the paperwork, which included her cutting a piece of clear tape and using it to fasten the two photos to the form. “You don’t see that in the states,” my partner said to me. “A scissor and two sheets of tape for an application.”

While we waited for the woman to process the papers, we noted a sign advising the public that the system that processes credit card payment had malfunctioned. Cash only, we learned. “This will be 1,100 rand,” the woman said through the window. I checked my wallet, which held 600 rand. My partner had no cash on her.

“Where’s an ATM,” my partner asked the clerk. “Out the road and turn left, and you’ll seen an ABSA on your right,” the clerk said. “He’ll go get cash and I’ll wait here,” my partner told her.

With that the clerk nodded and I trotted out of the building and toward the Land Rover, which remained parked in front of One-Stop. As I ran I tugged on my shorts, which seemed to falling down and tried to be careful not to trip in my flip-flops.

I drove out of the parking lot and toward the bank, where I swung the Land Rover into the first space I could find, jumped out and jogged to a row of ATMs. I withdrew 2000 rand, made sure I had my wallet in hand, then turned and ran back to the Land Rover and returned to One-Stop, then trotted back over to the licensing office.

I passed my partner the cash. She counted out 1,100 rand and slid the notes through the slot beneath the window to the clerk. The clerk counted the money then turned slightly to type into a machine, before picking up the forms and returning them to us.

Then the clerk produced a form I had not seen. It was a registration document, which, at the bottom, included the disc – akin to an inspection decal in the states – that we sought.registration

I stared at the document, half expecting the paper to vanish before our eyes or the clerk to pull it back to her side of the glass. But the disc remained on our side.

My partner and I smiled, thanked the clerk and wished her “Shala gashle,” which is Zulu for “stay in peace.” Though we had the disc but we still needed license plates that would tie to the registration. The ones on the Land Rover had expired.

By then it was about 9:30 a.m. My partner had yet to pack but we resolved to finish the registration. We jogged back to One-Stop, where we paid another 170 rand for plates, which a clerk produced by hand in the rear of the shop. The plates numbered three in all: identical rectangular placards for the front and rear bumpers and a square one for the rear panel.

“We’re in a hurry,” my partner reminded the manager, who turned to the man making the plates and relayed the news that we had a plane to catch. Within a minute or two the man emerged from behind his workbench. He had three plates in hand as he headed toward the parking lot with my partner and me trailing. I ran ahead to start the Land Rover, which the man motioned me to pull to one side of the driveway.

I jumped out of the Land Rover while the man removed the old plates, wiped the new ones with a cloth, then mounted them by peeling away adhesive that revealed an adhesive strip that ran along the perimeter of each one and allowed the plates to be affixed to the vehicle.

platesWhile the man worked, my partner dropped the disc into a plastic holder affixed to the inside of the windshield on the passenger’s side. When the man finished we thanked him, tipped him 10 rand and drove away.

“I can’t believe it. We have a registered vehicle,” I said to my partner. “Thank you for getting all you did today to help finish what we started. Now we can drive to Durban or anywhere we’d like without having to worry what might happen if the police pull us over. We’re legal!”

My partner agreed. “You’ve been working on this since October,” she said. “I wanted you to be able to leave South Africa with it finished.”

Categories
Life

Stories

zumiThere’s a Zulu man who canvasses houses here in Hilton to ask for money. On Saturday he appeared at our gate, where he claimed he needs funds to buy a school uniform for his daughter.

The man, Bhekumzumi Sydney Zimu, 47, has appeared from time to time at my partner’s door for the past eight years. He’s a fixture in the neighborhood, you might say.

“Where is your daughter,” my partner asked Zumi, who had told us his daughter is in the eighth grade.

“In a boarding school in Willowfontein,” he answered. “She’s in grade 12.”

“I thought she was in the eighth grade,” my partner said.

“My older daughter is in twelfth grade,” Zumi said.

Zumi said the eighth grader attends school on a scholarship that leaves him responsible for her food and uniform, which he said he hopes to buy at a store in Pietermaritzburg.

My partner called a Zulu friend, whom she asked to speak with Zumi for the purpose of investigating his story. If it checked out, my partner and I discussed the possibility of driving him to the uniform shop, where a uniform sells for about $5 (U.S.). That would be one way to determine if he’s telling the truth.

Zumi talked with the friend for about four minutes then handed the phone back to my partner. His story was difficult to assess by phone, according to the friend, who recommended that we advise Zumi to come by the office where my partner and her friend work. There the mostly Zulu staff could assess the truth of his tale.

My partner relayed the decision to Zumi. She wrote out instructions to bring a letter from the school that identifies the daughter by name and attests to his being her father.

note

Zumi said he would do that. Then he began, in his limited English, to tell us about a job he had in Hilton with a man who died. The man’s wife would not continue Zumi’s employment because she had never met Zumi and could not verify his story, he said. Without the job, Zumi needed money to finish putting up his house, which has unfinished walls he says.

We’ll see whether he shows up at the office. In the meantime, my partner is withholding judgment. “He rolls out all kinds of stories,” she says.

UPDATE: As of February 28, Zumi has yet to appear at the office.

Categories
Life

In summertime, an old treat feels new again

king cone copySouth Africa may be the land of biltong, but my snack of choice lately is the King Cone. The frozen treat, commonly known as a drumstick, consists of ice cream in a waffle cone topped with a chocolate shell. It seems drumsticks are for sale in every grocery and convenience store here in the Kwa-Zulu Natal province.

Maybe it’s the summertime or that there seem to be fewer ice cream shops per capita here compared with the U.S., but it’s all I can do to avoid consuming a King Cone daily. The treat delivers about 360 calories and half a day’s ration of saturated fat, according to Nestle, the conglomerate that sells these things. My current tactic: buy one King Cone every fourth day. I devoured one on Wednesday and now look forward to Sunday.

The drumstick elicits memories of visiting the convenience store in the neighborhood where we lived as kids. That was years before frozen yogurt and Ben & Jerry’s. Back then if you wanted something frozen you sprang for a drumstick, a Popsicle, a Creamsicle, a Cap’n Crunch bar, a Heath bar or one of those ice bars that come in long plastic sleeves. (My favorite flavors: grape, lime or blue.)

Nestle cultivates the nostalgia. Even if you’re an adult it’s okay to like Saturday morning cartoons, grilled cheese for dinner and, of course, drumsticks, the company assured consumers last April in a sponsored post on BuzzFeed. Like many products nowadays, the drumstick has its own Facebook page. Nestle commissioned a musical tribute when the page notched its millionth fan.

Despite the hype – or maybe because of it – the drumstick has become my summer delight here in the Southern Hemisphere. The nostalgia has me on the lookout for other treats that brightened, or benighted, my childhood. Would anyone like a Tic Tac?

Categories
Favorite Places Life

At the Atlantic Ocean, imagining life on both sides

ocean3The Atlantic Ocean always beckons me. It’s the ocean we visited on summer vacations as kids when my father piled us into the Oldsmobile for a drive across Pennsylvania to the shore. Throughout my life, a trip to the beach has meant plunging into the waves that roll into New Jersey, Delaware, New England, New York City and elsewhere along the East Coast. Until recently, I worked in a newsroom that offered sweeping views of New York Bay, where the Hudson empties into the Atlantic.

Thus it thrills me to visit the Atlantic from Africa, where my girlfriend and I swam recently at the beaches off Cape Town and drove along the road that skirts Chapman’s Peak, a mountain that ascends from the ocean to the city’s southwest. The 5.5-mile drive twists and tucks into the rise, suspended above sheer drops that tumble into the sea while the mountains tower above you.

Every mile or so we stopped the car and stepped out to gaze out at the blue expanse, which glistened in the sun. I pictured New York, roughly 7,900 miles away, and imagined what might be happening there and what it might be like to see all the way to the other side. Next time I’m at the beach in New York, I will imagine what might be happening here.

Categories
Life

Some highs of 2013…

sa_screenshotSugar-free dry lemon

Swimming at Virgin Active Health Club, Cascades

A divining with a Zulu traditional healer

Editors who accepted my pitches, then made my stories better

Twitter and Facebook friends who connected me to home

iTunes

Happy hour with the American Banker newsroom

Visiting Kingsmead Cricket Ground with Vasu

The friendship of Tala and Juma and our visits to Cedara

Learning to drive a Land Rover

Reading Nelson Mandela’s “Long Walk to Freedom” and Peter Godwin’s “Mukiwa”

Cape Town

Thursday nights at Red Lantern

A different menorah for each day of Chanukah

Signal Hill at sunset, with coffee by the Coffee Maestro

Bruce Springsteen’s “Born to Run” album

Swimming with Dad at the JCC

Standing outside at 4:00 a.m. and gazing at a sky full of stars

RW1 reunions

Falling asleep on the lawn at Tumble Downs

Christmas Day visits

Standing in the township, looking out at the homes that dot the hillsides, the town in the valley below and the mountains beyond

Lunch with Krista in the middle of Broadway

Sports Day at Edendale Hospital

PopTech

Pippin with Stacy, Dan, Andrew, Maddie and Josh

Swimming in the Atlantic Ocean off Africa

Visiting Cesar Vallejo’s grave

Jumping off a sailboat into Long Island Sound

Walking through Carnegie Mellon’s campus with Mom and Krista

Swimming at Asphalt Green, Battery Park City

The Black Tonic at Cape Town Microroasters

Eating oysters for the first time, at Ray’s Boathouse

Braais

Gutters full of jacaranda blossoms

Summer days at Butler Library

Vanilla milkshake at the Minnesota State Fair

Listening to Sidney Bechet

The all-night painting fest with James and Veronique

That Liam Neeson/Ricky Gervais video

Graduating from Columbia J-School

Having a Citi Bike key

Meeting Purple Ferdinand

Dancing with Makhosis to house music at the beach

Cycling through the streets of Paris at night

Walking with Krista through the Public Garden

The Tecate and Tabasco Michelada at Mary’s Fish Camp

Visiting Parliament in Cape Town

Soccer clinic with the Wave

Josh describing his former cellphone as a “dumb phone”

Whippoorwills in the predawn

The “Rock n’ Roll” rabbi

Mesut Ozil’s free kick

A first date with Krista, finally…