In loving, living memory, John Melançon 1928 – 2007
So I asked Dad how much he'd lied to get a job...
told them I was a short-order cook. At a breakfast place. I didn't know how to crack an egg. I had two buckets of eggs I didn't crack right.
He quietly paid me and told me to go home.
He had a black guy that worked there come in a little early– he was a whizz, in no time at all he had caught up
Atlanta
I met, I personally met a lot of these women
[the women who were the real driving force, and backbone of the civil rights movement]try to teach us how to sing
a spiritual you've got a good voiceprosecuting attorney whose phones we used
"I know you've got negras over there
if someone reports you I'll prosecute the hell [out of you]
but I don't want you to stop using the phone"at least I had the sense to not say anything
when I chose to leave
my friends in the Greek mafiaApparently he spoke to Teddy for like two hours.
If the tips weren't right you found yourself a home somewhere else.
And every couple of weeks it seemed he was giving me a raise.
then came the springtime when as is my wont I went on a long, long vacation. Except I told him [simply that I was leaving]
I was a star with the customers too
half Harvard students and half neighborhood
a lot of law students from Harvard would come in late at night and sort of unwind
[after Dad got back]
Dad remembers a cook at a restaurant he worked at as a kid talking about a mission into China during the Opium war
nearly starving to death
later a movie - cinemascope and all that, he thinks starring Steve McQueen -- called Sandpebble about one of the ships used in that mission
Dad as a young kid in New Orleans (working for a big wheel in the mafia) remembers J. Edgar Hoover's statement that there is no organized crime in the United States.
[When anyone could stand on any street corner in any city in the U.S. and know there was.]
James Farmer of CORE (Congress Of Racial Equality)
while Martin Luther King and them were fighting it out
James Farmer visited us at the community
I recall him being uncomfortable
I think the reason is, after many years thinking about it
the main thrust of the people down there was economic
the main hope of poor people and everyone else was the way you make a livingand they came up with this idea of intentional community
from each according to his ability, to each according to his need kind of thingand they realized that required an incredible commitment
The place where Cheers was filmed at the time would have killed to hire me.
I had an apartment on Beacon Hill, which even then wasn't cheap.
As much money as I could make now, $400 aweek, I could make then-- pre-inflation!
entertaining all the time
living large
goes to show you how screwed up the economy has become
One of the reasons I hate birthdays
When I was quite young I fell into reading Russian literature, like I knew Russian or something.
And the Russian aristocracy celebrated everything, birthdays, name days
But all through my life I liked buying gifts for people, for no particular reason, when the mood strikes me.
in the same place where he spotted the misspelling of deodorant in deodorant soap
Dad said he must have been 18, 19 when he applied. Talked in the room outside the office with an eager, bright, young black man while waiting for the interview.
He left, happy-- probably told 'we'll call you.'
I went in, and was given the job on the spot.
And I knew-- I knew I got the job because I was white.
I think about that all the time.
still can bring tears to my eyes if I keep thinking about it
Rethinking my answer to a question I was asked in Europe and Israel often
[What is it I missed most about the US?]The ability to live at any level I wanted to.
Which you couldn't there.
You could have a room someplace and work two or three days a week.
What incredible, incredible freedom that allows you.
That was before the fascists really took power
slowed down a little bit by CarterBut they were operating, representatives of the Republican administration
The day the election was over they turned them loose.