I ran for
political office when I was thirteen and Dwight D. Eisenhower was President of
the United States.
I declared my
candidacy for Guardian of the Flag. This
was a position in our junior high school; the guardian stood on stage and led the
Pledge of Allegiance before every school assembly. I was eminently qualified: I knew the Pledge by heart.
My opponent was
also eminently qualified. His name was
Roger Pitman and he also knew the Pledge by heart. However, I had an advantage because Roger’s
father was a doctor and my father worked for a printing company.
That meant I
could get free campaign tags printed up: SCHNEIDER FOR GUARDIAN OF THE FLAG.
The tags had strings so people could attach them to a shirt button.
The other offices
up for election were student council president, vice-president, treasurer, and
secretary. The school bunched us into
two groups of five candidates, forming political parties. The idea was to make our junior high election
more like a national election.
We named
ourselves the “Pyramid Party”. Pyramids
are a symbol of wisdom and endurance.
Our opponents
were more audacious. They named themselves the “Rock And Roll Party”.
This was audacious because rock and roll was a new phenomenon. Only two years had passed since Bill Haley
and Elvis Presley had their first hit records.
Members of the
Pyramid Party were paraded in front of various social studies classes for
question-and-answer sessions. I was ready
for the big question for the guardian of the flag: do you know the Pledge of
Allegiance by heart? However, the social
studies classes focused their questions on the big guns: the candidates for president and the
vice-president.
Sometimes members
of both the Pyramid and the Rock And Roll Parties were in a social studies
class at the same time. Ten people lined
up in front of the blackboard. During
one of these sessions, a Pyramid candidate taunted the opposition by calling rock
and roll a “baby”. In response, a Rock
And Roll candidate called a pyramid an “antique”.
That candidate
was my opponent, Roger, and his comment went viral throughout the school. He won the election.
However, as
runner up, I still got to appear at the junior high assemblies. My job was to take the flag out of its floor
stand and hold it at a respectful angle while Roger led the Pledge of
Allegiance.
A new school year
began. Roger and I were ready for our
debut. We stepped out on stage and stood
next to the flag. I reached over to take the flag out of the flag stand. Tug.
Tug. The flag would not come
out. Tug again, no luck.
Was this some
kind of practical joke? Had someone
deliberately tightened the screws holding the flag in place so I could not get
it out? I did some quick thinking and
picked up the flag while it was still in the stand and held it at a
respectful angle.
My stint as
runner-up for Guardian of the Flag taught me that I should always check my
equipment in advance --- and taught me that a candidate with a clever comment
like “antique” will win an election no matter how many printed campaign tags
the other candidate has.
- . - .- . - . - .
YouTube video (2 minutes): Eisenhower changes the Pledge of Allegiance in 1954: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itEeWkB3es0
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NOTE: Doug's best stories have been collected into a book: Puppy Out Of Breath. Price = $11. You can purchase a copy at http://www.puppyoutofbreath.com
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