IN SPORTS NEWS.
FOR THE BACK OF YOUR CAR.
FROM THE ILLUSTRATED EDITION.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR.
Sir: I was reading the signs along the sidewalk for the first time today. Now, I know that I ought to have read these signs every day, because they are placed there by our municipal government for our enlightenment and contain vital information of import to every citizen, but I have a life. But today I was stuck waiting for someone who never showed up, and I’m calling off the engagement, Rita, so if you read this good riddance, so I had time to read the signs.
Did you know you can go to prison for loitering? At first I thought it said “littering,” and of course everyone agrees that someone who drops a paper cup on the sidewalk should be put away for fifteen years. But no, it said “loitering” was punishable by fine or imprisonment.
As I understand it, loitering is the crime of remaining stationary longer than the cop who observes you thinks you ought to be wherever you are. For example, the signs say you can go to prison for “loitering” on the benches at the intersection of Murray and Darlington. Normally you would think that sitting in one place would be the purpose of a bench, but if you do it you’re loitering. I suppose you’re meant to fidget from one bench to another, but how many times a minute do I have to move? If you move six times in one minute but the cop thinks you should move eight times, off to prison you go.
Well, no wonder we’re spending so much money on incarceration, when everyone who isn’t an Olympic sprinter can end up in prison for sloth. Our jails are stuffed with people whose crime was inertia, and we’re paying tens of thousands apiece to house them at the public expense.
Now, I am not an unreasonable man. I do not like to point out a problem without having a solution to suggest. My proposal is a sensible one that solves the problem of expensive and overcrowded prisons while at the same time preserving the criminality of loitering, which appears to be a dear and treasured American principle necessary to maintain our hallowed tradition of freedom. We shall keep the crime of loitering on the books, but simply move the location. Instead of making it a crime to loiter on a bench along the sidewalk, we shall make it a crime to loiter in prison. Upon conviction, the penalty will be instant expulsion. Since I understand that the conditions in our prisons are favorable to loitering, I expect the prison population to be diminished by a considerable percentage just in the first year. —Sincerely, Dr. Hasdrubal M. McClutch, Associate Professor of Ancient Semitic Languages and Pickleball, Duck Hollow University.
MODEST STEIN AND THE KEYSTONE COPS.
Illustration by Modest Stein of a scene from The Auctioneer, a silent-film adaptation of the play by Charles Klein and Lee Arthur. From an advertisement for the film in Motion Picture News, May 8, 1926.
It turns out that Stein was momentarily quite famous under another name way back in 1892. He was part of the trio of Emma Goldman, Alexander Berkman, and Modest Aronstam who plotted to assassinate Henry Frick in 1892. He got away with his part in the conspiracy, changed his last name, and prospered. (And, to be fair, it’s hard to say whether trying to assassinate Frick should earn you a jail term or a government pension.)
Now, isn’t it a shame that the age of two-reel silent comedies is over? We can imagine how Mack Sennett would have taken this hint from Stein’s Wikipedia article and turned it into a perfect scenario.
On his way to blow up Frick’s house with pockets full of dynamite, Stein—then still called Aronstam—saw a newspaper with a headline warning against “Aaron Stamm” as a Berkman conspirator. He became frightened, dumped the explosives in an outhouse, and returned to New York.
That is how Wikipedia tells the story. But in the Mack Sennett version, the big gag comes when the cop who’s been chasing him for the past reel and a half decides he has to go to the outhouse and takes his cigar with him.
KNOW YOUR WARNING SIGNS.
From DR. BOLI’S UNABRIDGED DICTIONARY.
Cadaster (noun).—A petty or inferior cad.