Archive for the ‘connections’ Category

Tracers

January 23, 2008

My daughter N. often exclaims, “everything traces back to Chicago!” Those were certainly our formative years. Chicago is where I started my career, met my husband, bought my first home, birthed my two older daughters, forged my deepest friendships, gained my political education, discovered labor history, and confirmed my enduring passion for my native Great Lakes bioregion.

Spending the 80s and 90s in Chicago also meant that we crossed paths with lots of prominent Democrats. (I blogged about this before, here.

Back in the 80s, the public interest law firm in Chicago to work for was Davis, Miner, Barnhill, and Galland. True, serving an assistant corporation counsel during the Harold Washington administration, as I did, also won progressive brownie points, but Davis, Miner was hot, hot, hot. Name partner Judd Miner became Harold’s second Corporation Counsel, following James Montgomery’s return to private practice. Name partner Allison Davis, who was later to provide technical advice to the producers of the film version of Phillip Roth’s The Human Stain, was extremely successful in real estate practice, and also did his own real estate development. Chuck Barnhill moved to Madison, Wisconsin, but somehow stayed affiliated with the firm. And curly haired George Galland was active in the progressive bar association, the Chicago Council of Lawyers. The brilliant Brigette Arimond, then an associate at Davis, Miner, joined the corporation counsel for a time, and years later popped up with my dear friend Cyd as a fellow Bell magnet school mom .

Naturally, I had to chuckle when I read today’s Washington Post column, “The Fact Checker,” in which Michael Dobbs susses out a line of attack against Senator Barack Obama. I sat right up when I reached the fifth graph, quoting Obama’s “supervisor at the law firm,” William Miceli. Bill Miceli was at the corporation counsel when I arrived in 1985; at that time he and his wife occupied the Rogers Park apartment directly beneath my friends Ken and Caryn. Bill was one of the least partisan guys I knew. He was one of the legions of skilled City attorneys whose fine work was overshadowed by an office reputation sullied by decades of patronage sloth. Bill’s fine work, fortunately, drew the attention of the top dog, Judd Miner, who wisely took Bill with him when it was time to return to private practice. And it was completely fitting that a talented, public-interest minded, Ivy-educated community organizer-turned-attorney would later be snapped up by Davis, Miner, Barnhill and Galland. Look where he is now!

I haven’t shown my daughter the news clip yet. She’ll just grin and nod knowingly. Another tracer, back to Chicago.

In the News . . .

January 17, 2008

I just love seeing my college classmates (Mount Holoyoke 1979) in the New York Times. Today it was Priscilla Painton (MHC ‘80, because she took off a year in France), who was in my German conversation class freshman year. Priscilla, who recently left Time Magazine, was heralded on p.C3 of the Times  as a newly named  editor-in-chief of a section of Simon & Schuster. Although the division’s name, “adult trade” sounds vaguely pornographic, Painton has made a wonderful career move.  Just think, getting paid to promote all those books!

Priscilla’s good friend and Mount Holyoke ‘79 classmate Elizabeth Taylor made a similar leap from Time’s Chicago bureau a few years back, joining the Chicago Tribune as its Literary Editor. Although the Tribune moved the Sunday book section to the Saturday paper about a year ago, Taylor is still listed as “Magazine Editor and Literary Editor” in the Tribune’s staff e-mail directory.  Just think, getting paid to read, think about, and write about all those books!

The “old girl network” pipeline from MHC to Time worked pretty well back in the day. Ellie McGrath, ‘74, was a Time reporter who mentored Liz and other cub Time reporters, and Headley Donovan, Editor-in-Chief, was a trustee of Mount Holyoke. (If memory serves, his daughter attended Mount Holyoke, although don’t hold me to it.)

Star Struck

January 15, 2008

I loved the 60s Southwest Missouri State College (SMS) basketball Bears. For three seasons, Curtis Perry, an impressive forward from Washington, DC, led the team. Perry made the 1970 draft to San Diego. A young Perry later showed up in a George Pelecanos crime thriller, in an early 60s chapter.

SMS produced actors, too. It was known for Tent Theater, the summer stock drama program. My dad still reminisces about his favorite performance of “A Midsummer Night’s Dream, ” in the 70s. John Goodman was Bottom. Kathleen Turner was Titania. Tent Theater also featured Tess Harper back then, who later starred in a Texas movie with John Malkovich and was never heard from again. A kid named Pitt from Kickapoo High School made the big time. On Sell’s bio page IMDB erroenously reported that Pitt spent time at SMS but Pitt actually attended Mizzou. Known as Brad, made his big screen debut getting offed in a parking lot by Susan Sarandon. My brothers played little league with Pitt’s brothers.

Springfield produced TV notables, too. Our neighbor Wilbur taught Price is Right host Bob Barker at Drury College when Barker was an economics major in the 1940s. My friend Kathy’s parents entertained Donna Douglas, “Ellie Mae” of the Beverly Hillbillies, at their boat up at Lake of the Ozarks. Kathy’s family met Donna when an episode was filmed in Missouri. Branson had not yet become the entertainment mecca we know today. Back then, the Shepherd of the Hills pageant was the biggest show after Silver Dollar City.

My cousins lived a block from the Ciccone family in Rochester, Michigan. The Ciccone’s oldest daughter graduated from Adams High School with my cousin Tom in 1976, and attended his graduation party. My late Aunt Kathy recalled that the girl came to the party barefoot, her feet dirty. Aunt Kathy also sold an a used girls’ bike to Mrs. Ciccone. My cousin Marie once espied the neighbor girl under the school stadium bleachers, smooching another girl. When the neighbor girl became famous in show biz. she dropped her family name and went by her first name, Madonna.

A guy I knew from high school, Rod Sell , spent time at SMS, but then became a stage actor in Chicago in the 80s. I used to see Rod in plays. He was great in Bob Meyer’s brilliant production of Mamet’s “American Buffalo.” Rod got into movies. Years later, I watched a home video of “Groundhog Day.” Who should be playing the mustachioed town mayor, but Rod! Over and over and over again, Rod presided over the big town rally with his shoulders shaking, belly rolling and voice booming : “Hey, there, what can I do yah for!!” “Hey, there, what can I do yah for!!”

My NYU law school classmate Marc Platt produced the law school musical every year. Marc is now a fabulously successful Hollywood and Broadway producer with more insight into the entertainment needs of my teen and pre-teen girls than I’ll ever have. See, e.g., Wicked; Legally Blonde; Legally Blonde II, Wicked, the movie, Legally Blonde, the musical . . . .

I studied piano in Chicago with Mrs. Evans, whose daughter Andrea Evans was a soap opera star. Mrs. Evans is in one of the pictures on Andrea’s website. I now study piano with Mrs. L, whose actress daughter Robin starred in an HBO series where Robin’s character cussed up a storm. Mrs. L. is not on Robin’s website.

My husband’s college classmate Chris Murray finished filming the new season of Zoey 101 at the end of August last year. Chris’s star-struck seven year old daughter was so excited to meet Jamie Lynn Spears at the wrap party! Chris was so pleased to be working for Nickelodeon! When Chris came to visit my daughters were so thrilled to meet a star from cable! We can’t bring ourselves to phone Chris and ask him his plans for next season.

Known Associates

January 13, 2008

“It’s not what you know, it’s who you know,” so goes the old saw. My political bona fides span four decades, three states, and two continents. Here are some of the public figures whose paths I’ve crossed since my Missouri childhood.

Our Catholic Archbishop for the Springfield-Cape Girardeau Archdiocese in the 70s and 80s was a Bostonian named Bernard Law. The Vatican sent a series of up-and-comers through that Ozarks posting, a hardship position and a great training ground for Bishops of potential rising through the ranks. Truly the “buckle of the Bible Belt,” Springfield boasted the world headquarters of the international Assemblies of God, sponsor of the local affiliate Evangel College. Two other fundamentalist colleges graced our fair city, Central Bible College, and Baptist Bible College (alma mater of the late Jerry Falwell.) The President of Evangel College in whose years was a man named Ashcroft, whose son graduated the Springfield public schools before heading off to Yale, and Yale Law, of whom more later.

Bishop Law’s predecessor, a kindly, bald and bespectacled fellow named Baum, bounded off to Rome from Springfield, landing a high level policy job and his Cardinal mitre with barely an intermediate stop in Kansas City. The Vatican welcomed him as “Cardinelli Boom.” Cardinal Law also launched his rocket climb up the hierarchy from his seat as Archbishop of Springfield-Cape Girardeau. After Springfield, Bishop Law rose to Cardinal and Archbishop of Boston, where, sadly, he gained notoriety for his morally bankrupt, his politically inept, obstructionist rejection of allegations of priestly child abuse in his archdiocese. Law ended up in Rome, after all, put out to a pasture by a Vatican desperate to keep him out of sight and equally desperate to quell the Catholic public uproar.

My connection to Law dated back in the mid-1970s, when Law was counselling my sweetheart Mike S. (who dubbed Law “Bernie”) during Mike’s years in priesthood prep at St. Meinrad’s Seminary in rural Indiana. Bernie often reminded Mike that Bernie, originally from Boston, attended Harvard before he enrolled in his own ecclesiastical studies. Bernie spoke of those years with a wink-and-a-nudge, innuendo that was reassuring to a seminarian struggling with a future of forced celibacy. I recall Mike taking me by Law’s archdiocesean offices in downtown Springfield for an introduction and visit, and I would like to believe no wink or nudge passed between the men that day.

Incidentally, Mike’s late father, a public school educator, was a social studies teacher in his early career. One of his prized students at Study (rhymes with “Judy”) Junior High, on Springfield’s North side, was none other than the young John Ashcroft. As he lay ill with cancer, Mr. S. still referred to Ashcroft fondly as one of “his boys.” By then, Ashcroft had been elected to county, then statewide office,well on his way on the trajectory that (he credited Jesus for fueling) put him in the Attorney General’s seat in George W. Bush’s first term. I later wondered whether then-Missouri Attorney General Ashcroft ever met with then Bishop Law, in those quiet years before both burst onto the national scene. My father played pick-up basketball games with Ashcroft from time to time from the 1960s through the 1980s on the campus of what was then Southwest Missouri State College. Ashcroft avoided the draft by teaching business at SMS for a few years in the 60s; my dad was an English lit. prof. there his whole career.

My mother attended Wal-Mart shareholder’s meetings in Arkansas in the 1980s. She met Bill Clinton at one such meeting. Mom described looking up at the “best looking man she’d ever seen.” Bill Clinton taught my friend Marin’s Constitutional Law class at the University of Arkansas in Fayetteville in the 1980s. Marin did not ask Professor Clinton for a reference at the end of the semester. Marin’s friend, who did, won a cushy job at State in 1993.

In the late 80s, my Chicago chum E. became the first chief of staff for a newly-created ABA Commission on the Status of Women in the Law, whose champion and creator was the wife of Arkansas Governor Bill Clinton, his Yale Law School classmate Hilary Rodham. Rodham added “Clinton” to her name, made her fortune in commodities trading, left her mark on the ABA, then returned to Arkansas to tackle the state’s education system. E.stayed at the ABA, but moved from the Commission on Women into the Torts division by the mid-1990s. By 1992, Governor Bill embarked on his presidential campaign, back in the days the primary season stretched from February to August. E. and her then-husband, an aspiring Chicago Alderman , hosted a series of small gatherings to introduce candidate Bill Clinton to the locals providing my one and only chance to meet Mrs. Clinton. I saw her up close in an event at the executive offices of the YWCA in early April of that year.

Ah, the Chicago years. Those were the days. My book group included the future wife of Rahm Emmanuel.My closest friend in Chicago–who coincidentally attended high school with Rahm–married a speechwriter for a Democratic presidential frontrunner. Our 1988 Wedding guest roster included one sitting and one future member of Congress; several Illinois legislators, one sitting and one future Chicago Aldermen; the eventual chief of Staff to mayor Daley; an eventual Evanston School Board Member; Congressional staffers; policy wonks, and various other unsavory types. I had been an attorney for the City of Chicago in the exciting days of the progressive administration of Harold Washington, the Black mayor of Chicago who unseated the political machine.The following year I went to work for the venerable Leon M. Despres, who had been the most notable and accomplished dissident Alderman to oppose the first Mayor Daley in the 50s, 60s, and 70s. In 1990 my husband, who had worked for a Congressman, then an alderman, then as a lobbyist for a consumer group, was a volunteer fundraiser and supporter of the upstart U.S. Senate campaign of the late, great Paul Wellstone.

These days, my connections are remote, the politics tame. Having moved to Australia for three key years in the late 90s, then relocated to the Washington, DC area on return stateside, the Chicago glory days of political elbow-rubbing are but a distant memory. These days I even have to scrape up connections to Republicans: my mother-in-law’ friendship with Richard Armitage’s mother-in-law; my brother’s former job as pitchman for Amway products under Doug Wead, who later becaume a staffer in George W. Bush’s first term; or my college chum who served as a town council member in her Pittsburgh suburb.

The elected officials I now encounter run along the lines of our PTA executive board. In a company town where government is the industry, rubbing elbows with politicians seems like work–and triggers yawns, not thrills. Oh, I’m officially a “Friend” of an impressive freshman member of Maryland’s House of Delegates, Tom Hucker. And I finally stepped up to the plate to campaign for Donna Edwards, an exciting progressive challenger to our sclerotic incumbent Congressman. True, my oldest and dearest friend in DC is an elected official, but ours is a personal, and not political, connection. I have fun tweaking her Hill colleagues when they see us together at dinner,especially when they appear to worry that I’m “someone” they should remember.

My dear Chicago friend’s husband still writes those Presidential campaign speeches, but most of the elected officials at our wedding have left office. Chicago Mayor Harold Washington died 20 years ago November. We lost our beloved Paul and Sheila Wellstone in 2002. My husband went back to work for the Aussies last year, and I practice law just part-time, on contract, for Maryland and DC employment lawyers who support good Democrats. Politics should be essential, urgent, and vivid. But these days I’m blogging, opining, listing known associates. Taking stock alongside, no longer inside, politics.