Monday, December 28, 2020

my first car had a cigarette lighter

 


When my Chevrolet Bel Air was new (1958), it came from the factory with a cigarette lighter and an ashtray. That’s not exactly shocking news, since virtually every car sold in American that year had the same equipment. The 1958 Cadillac Eldorado came standard with 2 cigarette lighters in the front, and 2 more in the back. Air conditioning, however, was an extra cost option. More than 50% of the adult males, and nearly 30% of adult women, smoked cigarettes.

https://www.infoplease.com/math-science/health/substance-abuse/smoking-prevalence-among-us-adults-1955-2013

At this point, you’re probably wonder what made me think about this topic, and the answer is simple.

Robert Mitchum

The same year that my Chevy was sold to its first owner, Robert Mitchum produced, wrote, and starred in a movie titled “Thunder Road”. One of my friends in Wisconsin recently sent me a clip of part of the movie. The story was inspired by a real incident that occurred in 1952, when a driver transporting moonshine crashed and died while being pursued by the police.

 https://historygarage.com/birth-death-automobile-lighter/

If you would like to see the clip that I watched, just click on the link below:

Thunder Road Asheville - YouTube

One thing that caught my attention is that Mitchum used a book of matches to light a cigarette while driving his 1950 Ford, which got me wondering why he simply didn’t use the cigarette lighter, and there IS a logical reason for his actions.

The car did not have one.

So, my curiosity got the best of me, and I tried to find out when cars first came equipped with cigarette letters.

Although the closest patent for the design we’ve come to know hit the patent office in 1919, the first car lighters made an appearance long before the Model T.

The inventor of the electrical cigar lighter, Fredrich Wilhelm, registered his invention in the 1880s. It wasn’t necessarily a car lighter, nor was it for cigarettes. Back then one smoked a pipe or a cigar. It was a stinkier time.

Cigarette smoking didn’t popularize until after the Great War. WWI was when the cigarette companies first put the sticks into rations, triggering a smoking trend and marketing strategy that would stick around for several wars.

In 1919, J.M. Morris registered a design for a spring loaded “electrical lighting device for cigars and the like.” It wasn’t much different than what I had in my high school car, a knob with a heating element on the business end. You would plug it into a 12v socket until the heating element glowed.

Then, in 1956, someone coiled the heating elements, a design patent submitted by L.E. Fenn.

The Fenn design was so popular, it made it into not only cars and trucks as a standard, but boats and general consoles too. You read that right, from cars to consoles.

If you worked someplace, especially a military installation, where they had large equipment for tracking stuff, there was a lighter and an ashtray somewhere on said equipment for tracking stuff.

The cigarette companies made sure of it. They couldn’t put matches or Bic lighters in everyone’s pockets, but they could play Johnny Lighter-seed to the world. Heaven forbid someone would have to search for fire when he wanted to light up.

There were so many lighter sockets, in the 1980s, someone had the bright idea to retrofit and repurpose the lighter socket.

It was the dawn of portable electronic device, but mostly the first car phones. Those sockets put 12v of power right there, no wiring necessary. By that time, cigarettes were getting a bad rap, so many had quit the habit.

That open socket was asking for it.

The crazy demise of the car lighter was a multifaceted attack. First, all those health officials started saying cigarettes caused cancer and heart disease. That got a lot of folks to stop smoking.

Then, portable CD players and cell phones started kicking out the lighters, taking their place. Drivers would move the lighter to the unused ashtray until they would lose the part altogether. Somewhere, L.E. Fenn flipped in his grave.

The car lighter market destabilized so much, it became more costly for manufacturers to install them in cars, pushing the lighter from the standard features category into supplemental one. You had to ask and pay more for a car lighter.

What’s even more ironic, today’s cars, even economy versions, come with more than one socket, but not necessarily a lighter. This is less common outside the United States and Canada, but slowly changing elsewhere.

The car lighter may not be dead yet, but its days are numbered. Even as cigar smoking regains its clout as an acceptable form of smoking, car manufacturers continue to eliminate the coiled car lighter.

Modern cars come with at least one USB port, and at least one socket that could be used to power a cigarette lighter, but you’ll need to go to Walmart, and a few other outlets, if you want to have a cigarette lighter in your vehicle. However, it would be impossible to find a modern car that still had an ashtray.

I sold new and used cars for 7 years, and found that very few of the cars that I took in on trade had been smoked in. The most reliable statistic about smoker’s cars is that are worth, on average, about 9% less than cars that are smoke free.


There are more than 4000 chemicals in secondhand smoke, and nicotine levels are 30 times higher in smoker's cars than ones which are tobacco free. Car dealers use a variety of chemical to remove tobacco smells from cars, but sometime it takes more than one treatment to make the vehicle smell fresh again. Even if people don’t smoke in their cars, its also wise not to transport your dog in the car, since canine scents are also a bit difficult to get rid of.

https://www.carsguide.com.au/car-news/smoking-harmful-to-your-cars-resale-health-25412

By the way, in case you are wondering which other once common features are almost non-existent, consider this:

You can still buy new vehicles with manual windows:

https://www.cars.com/articles/yes-you-can-still-buy-a-new-car-with-manual-windows-


Friday, December 25, 2020

Yes, Virginia, there IS a Santa Claus

 

"Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus" is a line from an editorial called "Is There a Santa Claus?". The editorial appeared in the September 21, 1897, edition of The (New York) Sun and has since become part of popular Christmas folklore in the United States. It is the most reprinted newspaper editorial in the English language

In 1897, Dr. Philip O'Hanlon, a coroner's assistant on Manhattan's Upper West Side, was asked by his then eight-year-old daughter, Virginia O'Hanlon (1889–1971), whether Santa Claus, a legendary character, really existed. O'Hanlon suggested she write to The Sun, a then prominent New York City newspaper, assuring her that "If you see it in The Sun, it's so. In so doing, Dr. O'Hanlon had unwittingly given one of the paper's editors, Francis Pharcellus Church, an opportunity to rise above the simple question and address the philosophical issues behind it.

Church was a war correspondent during the American Civil War, a time that saw great suffering and a corresponding lack of hope and faith in much of society. Although the paper ran the editorial in the seventh place on the page, below even one on the newly invented "chainless bicycle", it was both noticed and well received by readers. According to an anecdote on the radio program The Rest of the Story, Church was a hardened cynic and an atheist who had little patience for superstitious beliefs, did not want to write the editorial, and refused to allow his name to be attached to the piece. More than a century later it is the most reprinted editorial in any newspaper in the English language.

In 1971, after seeing Virginia's obituary in The New York Times, four friends formed a company called Elizabeth Press and published a children's book titled Yes, Virginia that illustrated the editorial and included a brief history of the main characters. Its creators took it to Warner Brothers, who made an Emmy award-winning television show based on the editorial in 1974. The History Channel, in a special that aired on February 21, 2001, noted that Virginia gave the original letter to a granddaughter, who pasted it in a scrapbook. It was feared that the letter was destroyed in a house fire, but 30 years later, it was discovered intact.

A copy of the letter, hand-written by Virginia and believed by her family to be the original, returned to them by the newspaper, was authenticated in 1998 by Kathleen Guzman, an appraiser on the television program Antiques Roadshow. In 2007, the show appraised its value at around $50,000.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yes,_Virginia,_there_is_a_Santa_Claus

 

For more than 100 years, parents have debated about telling their children that Santa is real. A single mom named Vanessa McGrady wrote into the Washington Post about a week ago about how she handled the situation with her daughter. Here is her answer:

“Santa is real,” I said, reaching for some explanation of why the whole Santa/Tooth Fairy/Easter Bunny charade isn’t actually a lie. “He’s the spirit of generosity. When kids are little, they need a character like him to understand the concept of giving. But now that you’re older, you don’t need him. You even get to be a Santa yourself and give things to other people,” I told her. “So the Easter Bunny is the spirit of renewal and springtime. And the Tooth Fairy is the spirit of your changing body. They may not be actual creatures, but they’re real symbols about important things.

She seemed fine with this and agreed to not tell younger kids who still believe.

The following Christmas came amid a crush of Lands’ End catalogues. We threw our usual party. Santa knocked on the window. He came through the door with a booming “ho, ho, ho!” and made his way to an armchair.

 

Grace looked at me, clearly torn between wanting to believe and wondering if the spirit of generosity would still welcome her into his fold. “Mama?” she said in a small voice, “Is it okay if I still go sit on his lap?”

 

“Yes baby. Go,” I told her. She climbed up and had a whispered conversation with Santa, sitting squarely at the intersection where magic and reality meet.

Since then, we’ve been on a “don’t ask, don’t tell” honor system. She knows in her logical mind that mama brings pants and nearly everything else. Still, I’m certain that she’ll leave out cookies and milk for Santa — just to cover all the bases. Because you never know.

 https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/2020/12/17/santa-is-real/ 

Now that a few lucky members of our society have received the coronavirus vaccine, our society will gradually return to “normal”. One sign of that normality came from overseas, when members of the choir of Notre Dame Cathedral sang inside the medieval Paris landmark for the first time since last year’s devastating fire for a special Christmas Eve concert.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/europe/christmas-eve-concert-held-in-paris-fire-wrecked-notre-dame/2020/12/24/7474e306-4645-11eb-ac2a-3ac0f2b8ceeb_story.html

Accompanied by an acclaimed cellist and a rented organ, the singers performed beneath the cathedral’s stained-glass windows amid the darkened church, which is transitioning from being a precarious hazardous clean-up operation to becoming a massive reconstruction site. The choir initially planned to bring in 20 singers but for safety reasons they were limited to eight.

 

The choir members stood socially distanced to be able to take off their masks — which is required indoors in France to stem the spread of the virus — and sing.

The concert — including “Silent Night” in English and French, “The Hymn of the Angels,” and even “Jingle Bells” — was recorded earlier this month and broadcast just before midnight Thursday. The public was not allowed and isn’t expected to see the insides of Notre Dame until at least 2024. 

It IS true that Christmas this year will be a lot different than the ones we experienced in the past. No visits to the family farm in Wisconsin, no large gatherings in churches, no huge Christmas dinners with family and friends, and no visits with Santa in the malls of America.

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/on-parenting/christmas-pandemic-parenting-kids-expectations/2020/12/11/c53c747c-34b4-11eb-a997-1f4c53d2a747_story.html

Despite the fact that we won’t have the usual trappings of Christmas this year, we’ll always have memories of our Christmas celebrations of our past – and that’s Christmas to me.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pFjdfjrtf1Q&list=RDpFjdfjrtf1Q&start_radio=1



 

Monday, December 7, 2020

the devil made me do it

 

Apart from the Exorcist movie of 1973, exorcism is definitely not a topic that any of us gives much thought to, but the link below provides a look at my brush with the topic in 2014, when I lived in Flagstaff.

https://tohell-andback.blogspot.com/2014/05/the-ghost-of-father-karras.html

Believe it or not, the Vatican actually offers classes in Satanism and exorcism, but it’s highly unusual to encounter either of them in our normal lives.

That changed roughly 2 months ago.

Archbishop Salvatore Cordileone has faced several challenges since he became archbishop of San Francisco in 2012. They include a Supreme Court decision nullifying the Defense of Marriage Act that he championed; his failure to extract loyalty oaths on Catholic doctrine in hiring Catholic high school teachers; heavy blowback on his views on homosexuality; and his opposition to restrictions on Catholic worship he calls the work of "secular elites."

But his latest battle is against Satan, who he calls "the evil one." Cordileone performed the rite of exorcism as a response to the removal of statues of Franciscan missionary Junípero Serra at Golden Gate Park June 19, and later at Mission San Rafael, north of San Francisco on Oct. 12.

When the statues toppled, Cordileone sprang into action. Flanked by parishioners, priests and nuns praying the rosary, he conducted exorcisms at both places.

The prelate called the acts blasphemous and sacrilegious. He also demanded that the Marin County district attorney press felony and hate crime charges against the Native women who felled the statues. The district attorney filed felony vandalism but not hate crime charges against five people: Melissa Aguilar, Mayorgi Nadieska Delgadille, Victoria Eva Montano Pena, Moira Van de Walker and Andrew Lester Mendle.

 

https://www.ncronline.org/news/justice/san-francisco-archbishops-exorcisms-highlight-controversy-over-serra-conflict


Cordileone, the grandson of an immigrant Sicilian fisherman, received a doctorate in canon law in Rome. He was ordained an auxiliary bishop of his native San Diego in 2002 and later appointed bishop of Oakland in 2009.

The American Catholic hierarchy's support of the Serra canonization in 2015 provoked strong reactions from Native Californians who said that Serra admitted to supervising whippings of their people for minor offenses. They also charge him with founding a mission system whose policies led to the deaths of 150,000 Natives from 1760 to 1834 though mass incarceration, disease and slave-like labor conditions.

Like Christopher Columbus, Father Junipero Serra is a controversial figure to some members of our society. He is considered the founder of the California missions.

Not everyone agrees that the exorcism was a good idea.

"The exorcism was crazy and misleading," said Jesuit Fr. John Coleman, former Casassa professor of social values at Loyola Marymount University, Los Angeles, and associate pastor at St. Ignatius Church in San Francisco. "Serra was not an evil man, but he allowed a lot of bad things to happen, and this should be recognized."

A retired priest who ask not to be identified for fear of retaliation from conservative parishioners wrote in an email to NCR: "The recent exploitation of the rites of exorcism at sites where statues of Serra have been desecrated is consummately unwise. More wisdom can be gained from listening to our Native American brothers and sisters for whom Serra is a stumbling block to the church's credibility."

I was dismayed to read about the arson fire that severally damaged the San Gabriel Mission in July, one day before it was scheduled to reopen after an extensive renovation.

https://spectrumnews1.com/ca/la-west/public-safety/2020/07/12/fire-destroys-much-of-249-year-old-san-gabriel-mission

The only California mission that I have been inside of is Mission San Luis Rey, in Oceanside, California. It was founded by the Jesuits in 1798, and is the largest of the California missions. You can take a tour by clicking on the link below.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9FEXJAWJ7y0&t=18s




 As a society, we’ve done a better job of acknowledging the injustices that that were inflicted on Native Americans, but the wrong way to compensate for those injustices is to damage of destroy the other parts of our history – and California  missions should be on the top of that list.