Friday, March 27, 2009

In Monumentum

Lyn Nofziger

In Monumentum - Lyn Nofziger 1924-2006

Three years ago, Lyn Nofziger left us to go work crossword puzzles with Jesus and President Reagan and his daughter, Susie. He didn't want to leave us, but these things sometimes happen when people have cancer. He had a little time, though, albeit with some pain, and he fought hard. He loved life, but he did not fear death. He was a devout Christian. He knew his Redeemer lived.

Last time I saw him, in March of 2006, I looked him in the eye, paused, and said, "I am sorry you are sick.

He laughed and said, "I'm sorry I'm sick too.

He was slipping badly by that time. It was a chore to go to the bathroom. They gave him one of those plastic thingies, into which one can pee when it’s difficult to skip off to the restroom. Lyn knew that at times I could be almost as dumb as rocks. He handed me one of the filled plastic thingies and said, "Bonnie (his wife) is in the kitchen. Would you take this in there and pour it down the kitchen sink?"

"I'd rather try and sell it on Ebay,” I said. It is, after all, Lyn Nofziger pee." The notion that he was some kind of celebrity amused him. Whenever we were out in public, I’d beg him to walk up and down the street until someone recognized us so I could be seen with him. To conservatives, he was a celebrity.

I almost took the plastic receptacle into the kitchen, where Bonnie was gomming around with something.

Almost. He would have had a big laugh at that too.

If you know Bonnie, you'd know her kitchen is spotless and immaculate, and that one most generally does not pour urine down the sink. Thankfully, I realized Lyn was joking, and I took it to the bathroom.

Shortly before be got sick, I wanted to return to Washington and work for the Bush Administration. Lyn gave me the name of a contact and said, "tell him I'm dying, that you are a friend of mine, and to hire you.”

Joking at a time like that. Only Lyn.

I met him in the fall of 1978. I was in Los Angeles to interview for a summer job in Governor Reagan’s office. He must have felt sorry for me with my polyester suit, cheap shoes, clip on tie, and bad haircut. Maybe I reminded him of himself, as he was dressed much the same way. He was no Beau Brummel, and he'd be the first to tell you that. Those who knew him, though, thought he was Cary Grant. He invited me to his home that evening for dinner on the deck, which he built. He love to putter and garden.

He knew what it would mean for me to be invited to his home. He could have easily passed me off with a handshake at his office, but he was far too swell. Lyn Nofziger was political royalty. In 1976, when Reagan almost beat Ford, Lyn was constantly in the papers, magazines and on TV, because he was Press Secretary for the campaign.

I got the summer job in Los Angeles, and over the years, I bugged him with fan mail, phone calls, and I worked for him as an aide. When I lived in Virginia, and when I didn't make much money, he’d hire me to rake leaves or wash windows. When he and Bonnie traveled they paid me to housesit. He knew I could use the extra money. He helped lots of folks.

When my Mother visited, he insisted on taking us to eat, every time. Once, at an expensive Chinese restaurant called Mr. K’s (which ain’t cheap), he told the waiter to bring us some of every dish on the menu. My Mom had never been to a Chinese restaurant. That was special.

I grew to love and admire Lyn even more because I had the joy of getting to know him as a friend. A real person. Someone with whom I could talk politics, baseball, current events or gardening. The one subject Corporal Nofziger would not discuss was the War, which told me his experience wasn’t as a librarian at Fort Dix. He knew something about D-Day.

Our favorite pastime was the crossword puzzle. When I visited, he let ME have first crack at it. Back home, if I was stumped with a puzzle, I'd fax it to him so he could fix it. He’d share with me that I'd "effed it all up." He used a pen, and he laughed at ME for using a pencil. True crossword aficionados use an ink pen. Good for them. I don't.

It was funny when he ribbed me. I ribbed him too, and once in awhile I got off a good one at his expense, like the time he used bad grammar on CNN. That happened ONE TIME that I know of with Lyn Nofziger. He said "the media is" instead of "the media are." Well big deal. Who knows that anyway? He taught me more about writing and grammar than a thousand teachers could have. He loved to call me when my beloved Oklahoma Sooners lost. He told me I was a jinx. I loved to call him when his beloved Red Sox lost. How he loved Ted Williams. I bought him an autographed photo of Williams once, and Lyn claimed it was a fake. He knew better.

Once I sent him a shirt for Father's Day. Later, I asked him about it. He told me it didn't fit and that he hated it. Next time I flew out to Washington, he picked me up at the airport. He was wearing the shirt, and it fit just fine. Bonnie told me it was his favorite shirt, and that he wore it all the time.

I sent him some old fashioned candy from the Vermont Country Store. He told me he threw it out. "Bonnie and I hate candy, and it made Bonnie sick," he said. I found out that was a fib too. He'd wolfed it down because he loved sweets. Once he ate up all my Atomic Fire Balls.

He loved to give you a hard time, but only if he knew YOU knew he was joking.

Lyn, Bonnie and me on Lyn's 70th Birthday, 1994

Oh yeah, I give him credit for winning the Cold War.

In 1976, after Reagan's narrow loss to Ford, Lyn advised the Reagans there was about a million bucks left over. They could pocket the money, give it away, or do anything they wanted with it; it was their money.

Lyn suggested starting a poltical action committee, the purpose of which would be to help elect conservative Republicans. Reagan thought this was a splendid idea, and he asked Lyn to chair the committee. Lyn accepted.

The PAC was called "Citizens for the Republic,” and it supported conservative candidates and causes all over the country. More importantly, CFTR was a vehicle through which Reagan could keep his name before his supporters and the public. With CFTR, Lyn Nofziger held together the 1976 Citizens for Reagan campaign.

In time, Reagan for President, the official campaign organization, was born, but CFTR continued its very important work. Lyn eventually joined the senior staff at Reagan for President. In November, 1980, Reagan won a landslide victory over Jimmy Carter, America was saved, Carter became a harmless bore, and the rest is history.

President Reagan's leadership and policies led to the dissolution of the "Evil Empire." His Presidency led to a restoration of faith that America truly was a special place, set between the oceans, to serve as a beacon of hope, and an example for others. If that sounds a mite cheesy, it is because I have borrowed some of the phrases from other cheesy people, like President Reagan.

Lyn and the President in the Oval Office, c. 1982

Sometimes "cheesy" is good and true, though, and Reagan knew this. So did Lyn.

So, to sum up, Lyn ran CFTR, which led to Reagan for President. Reagan for President got Reagan elected, and this led to the end of the Cold War. Ergo, Lyn Nofziger ended the Cold War.

I miss Lyn every day of every week. I miss his emails, his awful puns, and his laughter at his own bad jokes. I miss his love and affection. I cherish the cardigan sweater he gave me. I miss calling him for advice on shaving. I miss him calling me when I had a super early flight, so I wouldn't oversleep. I miss him picking me up at the airport, and then bitching about the parking garage (English never spoken here) and the traffic on the way home. I always offered to take a cab, but he insisted on picking me up. I miss going with him to "Hard Times Cafe" for chili. I miss going to the mall on the day after Thanksgiving so we could complain about the crowds. I miss watching football games with him. I wish I could see him just one more time in an undershirt. Marlon Brando in a t-shirt, he was not.

I just miss him.

In the end, the doctor told Lyn he could have cigars, so he had cigars.

(c) 2009 Randall P. Hodge and Morningwood Enterprises, Ltd.


Sunday, March 22, 2009

A movie to watch when you've been made Redundant



When I am feeling a little down, I always like to sit back and watch one of those "feel good" Holocaust movies. The other day I found one. It is one few people have seen.

The movie? "The Boy in the Striped Pajamas."

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_RGRaeAx9Qs

It played at Quail Springs Mall for about six hours, and then it moved on. About 34 people in Oklahoma City saw it. It broke the record previously set by "Priscilla Queen of the Desert," which was seen by 12 people. As always, one must drive to Dallas for anything more exotic than fishing lures and guns...and Seth Rogen movies. I hate movie theaters anyway. The one at Penn Square often "smells like feet," as Malcolm in the Middle says. It costs about $300 to go to the movies.

The reviews for "Pajamas" were mixed, so I passed on going.
Now it is out on DVD.

The reviews for the movie were wrong. It was excellent. All the actors were (I think) British, and thank allah they didn't try to fake cliched German accents. Watch Hogan's Heroes for that nonsense. Can you imagine Tom Cruise (ugh) trying a German accent in "Valkyrie?" Honkey pleez. He didn't try it. As Samwise Gamgee said, "there is some good in this world."

There wasn't anything particularly special about"Pajamas" until the end. The ending made the rest of it fantastic. Not because of what happened, but it made the rest of the movie relevant. WOW. I'm glad no one ruined it for me by telling me the ending, which is why I'm going to tell you right now.

Psyche!

Refreshingly, "Pajamas" doesn't try to blame the Germans for the Holocaust.

Wait.

Yes it does. It WAS the Germans, wasn't it. My bad. They were just upset and misguided about some things, needed therapy, and they didn't mean to do it anyway.

Kind of like O.J.

Still, like "Schindler's List," the movie is anti-Germanic. I thought we'd moved past this ugliness and bigotry. Frrrrl. You know what really annoys me? Nowadays, when talking about the War, people say we were fighting the "Nazis." We were fighting the Germans, bitches. There weren't all that many "Nazis," --certainly not enough to roll through Europe. It is another one of those politically correct things morons say so Germany will feel better about allegedly starting a war in 1939. Poland started it, by the way.

Nazism was a political philosophy and a political party. People joined it and some wore dashing uniforms. Ask any World War II vet of the European Theater, though. He will tell you it was the Germans who were shooting at him.

Boy, I really digress.

"Pajamas" has some decent extras on the DVD, but not like "Lord of the Rings," which has about 128 hours of extras for the truly nerdy (like me) who think it is non-fiction. Extras are worth a look in "Pajamas."

By the way, why in the world didn't Frodo and Sam just hire a damned eagle to fly them to Mt. Doom? It would have saved us a lot of trouble, a bunch of dead folks, and two movies. I asked this question when I was 14, and I've yet to get a satisfactory answer.

But I digress again. I guess I forgot to take my medication.

My boy James Horner composed the music for "Pajamas," and it is terrific. He also composed for "Titanic," and many others I am too lazy to look up on IMDBpro (PRO version to which I subscribe, because I am going to be a big star some day).

"The Boy in the Striped Pajamas," bitches. Great flick. Watch it. Not many attractive people, and the fashion (other than the uniforms) was not so much, but...

There is a reason I constantly use the terms "bitches" and "Frrrrl (number of r's optional), which means "for real." I have learned these things from white people, who very much want to be black, and who learned the expressions from black people. I use them in a gallant effort to fit into this brave new Obamaworld. Black is the new black. I have even had hugging and gesture lessons, but I found out I suck at gangstah hugs and gestures because I am left handed. I think only white people are left handed, but I digress. Apparently, gangstah hugs are supposed to be "heart to heart," which is awkward for left handed people. We really should draw a check from the government for being left handed.

Rent the movie.

I wish everyone the very best this Easter, Purim, Passover, and whatever violent, self-flagellating or murderous "holiday"the muslims celebrate. I am sure they have copied something from the Judeo-Christian traditions. No offense.

Christians eat better on Easter; I am sorry Hebrews. We get ham, and fixin's, and you get bitter herbs and boring bread. We're fatter though.

Jewish Americans, You need TBN. NOW.

TBN logo (without the voiceover of my boy Efrem Zimbalist, Jr.)

Paul and Jan Crouch. Yes, the hair is completely real.

Jus' sayin'.

Randall P. Hodge, Esq., and Morningwood Enterprises, Ltd. (c) 2009