“Tell a joke!” someone shouts.
“Jokes, you want. Question: How many Hasidic rebbes does it take to change a lightbulb? Answer: What is a lightbulb?”
Silence.
“OK, so you didn’t like the dog, the image of the dog? This is a unique, strange face, Nixon’s. Let alone the brain doing its crazy gavotte behind it. Gavotte! The words smart Jews make their very own! Aggravation. Tumult. Excellent words. Unimpeachable goyish pedigrees, like nice shiksa girls named Mary and Betty; they went to Smith, Radcliffe, and Barnard, and now they’re in the hairy hands of these Jewish boys from Ocean Parkway, these nonmatric students at Brooklyn College, ogled and defiled like the pictures in the old stroke books. But a strange face. The mind gropes for comparisons. Only America makes a face like this. Healthy, but sick. Well fed, but malnourished. Intelligent, but lit by instinct. You look at your old Action Comics, Whiz Comics, Star Spangled Comics. The archvillains, well, you’re talking typecast. I mean, villains they were conceived, and villains they shall come off the drafting table, ever more. But if you look, schlepping around in the background of one of those comics you’ll always see the shoe clerk, the guy selling train tickets behind the barred window, the guy running the elevator, the guy who blends in and pledges his allegiance to the front runner — and that’s the face of Nixon.”
“Tell a joke!” shouts somebody.
“What, you want jokes, tonight? All right already. How many Lubavitchers does it take to change a lightbulb? Hmm? None; it’ll never die. OK? But listen, with that face, on Monday it’s ‘Floor, please,’ and Tuesday he’s hanging from your trouser leg, growling and snapping. The dog within. I like that, I can see it on the checkout rack at the A&P, Bantam, right next to The Sensuous Woman and The Strange Case of Alice Galton, which might actually be the same book. The Dog Within. By Kate Millett. It’s all about keeping that dog tied up in there, out of sight. You take a Nixon and you reduce him to the sum of his ad campaign. Nasty, Brutish, Short, Nixon’s the One, and then it’s just a matter of time until, oh yeah, they’re playing ‘Hail to the Chief’ while your guy’s waving his way down the gangplank of Air Force One, stomach all abubble over the prospect of tearing some ass, Pat with her Valium stare grafted to his side. So far so good, right? And then the product just, like, implodes. Like if the pilot of every plane in Pan Am’s fleet decided to nosedive into the ground the same day. The horror. The betrayal. The sense of having been taken. The thing is, Nixon did it to himself. Can’t you see them, the ad men, sitting in a room where the walls are covered with beautifully framed tampon ads, the window has a million dollar view of Birdshit Plaza, ‘Nu, Dick? Why? We had it all. China, detente, peace with honor, law and order. What a package. The only thing we didn’t deliver was good water pressure and a Sunday Times with no missing sections.’ McGovern was finished. A zero. Half of America thought he was a pinko. The other half thought he was Gene McCarthy in drag. And the third half thought they were both the same thing. Eagleton was the last nail in that coffin. Yeah, a VP fanning his lower lip with his index finger, making with the buh-buh noises? Little too close to the bone for comfort. This is the age of the VP ascendant. Ford, Nixon, Johnson, Truman. All of them succeeding men who’d basically died in office. Nixon had it all sewed up. But I always knew he’d screw things up in the end. The guy’s like Charlie Brown. It’s so long to the White House, the big valedictory speech, the ultimate Norma Desmond moment, and what comes naturally are the applause lines that used to wow those Chamber of Commerce luncheons back in Whittier. ‘This country needs good farmers, good businessmen, good plumbers, good carpenters.’ Genetically designed to run an employment agency on Fourteenth Street. What a brain, he always belonged behind that Steelcase desk, brown-bagging it or fried chicken from the five-and-ten lunch counter, real treyf, a blackboard behind him listing steam table jobs, housepainting work. ‘You got a chauffeur’s license, Mr. Kissinger? No? How about shoe sales? You think you could handle it? Fastpaced environment? See Mr. Dugatkin at Brunell’s.’ Later Dugatkin calls up. ‘Nixon, what’s with this Kissinger you’re sending me? He insults Mrs. Weinapple and her daughter Caitlin who shows such a talent for the folk guitar. He says Caitlin’s feet are like two lake bottom canoes. Since she’s this big I’m fitting this girl for her Keds and I’ll grant you she’s needing a little extra support in the arches, but size is not an issue. And after lunch — a seventy-minute lunch, but who counts? — he takes fifty-six cents from the March of Dimes box.’ Nixon’s mad, but in a prefab sort of way. He knows Dugatkin’s just kvetching, that the guy has every foot in Stuyvesant Town locked up. He wonders what the fuck is up with Kissinger, though. He had such an excellent presence. Very commanding. And that sexy accent. Who would have expected this? So he feels a gesture is incumbent upon him. So you want to know what he does, what he does is he sends Kissinger the next day to work for Shimmy Pressman, whose own Gala Shoe is just a few blocks up First Avenue from Brunell’s. Shimmy’s got the same stranglehold on Peter Cooper Village that Dugatkin’s got on Stuy Town. Same turnover problem too. I mean neither of these guys is a breeze to deal with, let’s face it; Dugatkin’s son ran away from dentistry school to dig clams out of Portsmouth Bay, Pressman’s daughter is a large animal veterinarian who communicates via ham radio from remote locations out west only during the High Holy Days. The kids grew up together, know each other from Camp Emanu-El, were on the same side in the yearly campwide maccabead. Team Masada. ‘Ya gotta! Ya gotta! Root for Masada!’ Great, suicide cults of the ancient world.”
A hand reaches out for Tania, clutches her sleeve.
“What type Jell-O? What type Jell-O have you got tonight?” It’s an old man, his eyes rheumy behind the unbelievably thick lenses of his eyeglasses. The words come out of a soft mouth that seems to be lacking many teeth. But his grip is like iron.
“He wants to know,” says a woman at his table, helpfully, “what the kind of Jell-O is that you’ve got here tonight.”
“Pressman’s on the phone even before the noon break: ‘Nixon! I’m sympathetic, the man is down on his luck. He shows initiative and he takes an interest. But then he tells Mrs. Glassman she’d have a better shot at getting a good fit if she went to the rowboat concession in Central Park.’ So Nixon, you know, he feels he’s accomplished something. A balance. Shuttle discourtesy. Plus, you know, it keeps Henry away from the office. He sits in that straight chair on the other side of Nixon’s desk, eyeing Nixon’s Woolworth chicken, kibitzing when Nixon has to take a phone call, erasing things on Nixon’s chalkboard when his back is turned.