The Verdict -- Robert Gardner
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Being poor is no fun. I can so testify. I don’t want anyone crying
copious tears over this revelation. It was simply a way of life, but out
of it a couple of incidents stick in my memory, incidents that never
would have occurred had I not been poor. Looking back, they almost make
the experience of being poor worthwhile.
The Gardners were prosperous Iowa farmers, but my father wanted no
part of that life. He ran off to be a lumberjack and cowboy. After that
he had several businesses fail, went to work on the railroad, lost
seniority because of a strike -- and then there was the Depression. This
was before scholarships or student loans, and there was no way I could
have gone to college except that I had an uncle who was a federal judge.
He decided I should go to college and carry on the tradition of a
judgeship in the family. So far, so good. We have a hungry kid with no
money but lots of ambition.
My uncle paid the tuition, but I had to scrape together everything
else. I went to USC, and there was quite a contrast with other students.
At the end of the school day, everyone headed west for home except two of
us who went east. Even then that was not the better part of town.
The first incident occurred in the Biltmore Bowl nightclub. It was the
place to go. For three dollars and 50 cents, one could sit at a table and
get a bowl of mix into which you poured your bottle of straight alcohol.
Somehow I got together the necessary funds to be there, but I didn’t
have a penny more to spend. As I was walking back to my table, I passed
another table on which reposed a pack of cigarettes. A smoke sounded so
good I reached out and grabbed the cigarettes and as I did, a bigger hand
than mine closed on my wrist. I dropped the package, my wrist was
released, I moved on, and that was the end of it. The guy could have made
a scene that embarrassed me or worse. He didn’t, and I never forgot. I
also never tried to purloin something again.
Incident No. 2: I was sitting at a lunch counter eating a crumb
doughnut. That was my meal for the day, and I was making that crumb
doughnut last as long as possible. A man sitting beside me noticed me
picking up every crumb. He paid his bill, walked out, and after he left,
the waitress brought me a platter of ham and eggs, which he had ordered
for me and paid for. I wolfed it down and never forgot that meal or the
anonymous man who paid for it.
Being poor wasn’t fun, but it did allow me to see the generous side of
two strangers.
* ROBERT GARDNER is a Corona del Mar resident and a former judge. His
column runs Tuesdays.
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