As It Happened
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About this ebook
In the book, William S. Paley reminisced about his personal life and his life with CBS—from the celebrities of the entertainment world to the business and political leaders of America to the journalistic controversies still in the news.
Paley bought CBS when it was a small struggling company called United Independent Broadcasting and when he was a young man still in his twenties. Within months he had begun a transformation which shaped CBS into one of the world's greatest communications empires. And still he found time to enjoy the "Roaring Twenties" in Paris, Philadelphia, Los Angeles, and New York.
A brilliant and creative businessman dealing for high stakes, Paley foresaw the cultural and informational impact of radio, and later, television. With an uncanny eye for spotting entertainment talent, he "discovered" for radio Bing Crosby, Kate Smith, Will Rogers, Frank Sinatra, and Paul Whiteman; and those he did not discover, he lured to CBS: Jack Benny, Amos and Andy, George Burns, Red Skelton, and a host of others.
But this book covers more than radio and television—it is about the tastes and trends of American culture, written by the man who helped to create and refine many of them. William S. Paley was CBS. His life touched virtually every major event of the twentieth century. This is a fascinating and revealing work about a man who perhaps more than any other, brought the great events of our times to us.
William S. Paley
William S. Paley (September 28, 1901 – October 26, 1990) was the founder and and chairman of CBS.
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As It Happened - William S. Paley
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
PREFACE
CHICAGO
GOING EAST
A YOUNG MAN’S FANCY
ON MY OWN
A DIFFERENT KIND OF BUSINESS
AFTER HOURS
TRIAL AND ERROR
PRESS-RADIO WAR
LIVE NEWS
OVERSEAS
TRANSITION
TRIUMPH
INTERLUDE
CREATIVE CHAOS
FROM RADIO TO TELEVISION
QUESTIONS AND ANSWERS
ENTERTAINING YOU
A SPECIAL NICHE
THE NEWSROOM
HEADLINES AND HEADACHES
CBS INC.
. . . AND BEYOND
PHOTOGRAPHS
APPENDIX
HIGHLIGHTS OF CBS NEWS
HIGHLIGHTS OF CBS TELEVISION
PHOTO CREDITS
INDEX
To the Memory of
BARBARA CUSHING PALEY
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I am deeply appreciative of the assistance a number of people have given in the preparation of this book.
John McDonald, an outstanding business historian, brought his notable talents to the original selection and organization of the material that forms the basis of the story. His integrity, his keen editorial insights and research guidance were of inestimable value.
Alvin Moscow, who aided in the preparation of the final manuscript, brought to that work not only his very special abilities as a biographer but also a professionalism that was both demanding and unstinting. His assistance was extremely important and appreciated.
Much of the information about CBS was researched and verified through reference to the company’s fine historical files, which were compiled so efficiently under the direction of Margaret Kennedy. Her associate, Linda Savasta Mancia, was another tower of strength in the many months of work.
Geoffrey Colvin, Harriet Heck and Terry Ryan were of great help in exploring and verifying a tremendous volume of material, and Rosemary Barthold Grieco was both meticulous and expert in translating dictation into manuscript.
I have been privileged to be associated with several generations of outstanding people at CBS. To all of them, I express my appreciation for their help in the living of this story.
Preface
Over the past fifteen years I have thought several times about setting down something about myself and my work at CBS. Now, here at last, I am sitting down to make a real try, tape recorder in hand, a pad of paper at my side, alone late at night in one of my favorite rooms which exudes a nice warmth. I decorated this room over the years, picking and choosing every piece of furniture, every work of art, and each of them has a special meaning and a story for me, like the painting La Voilette
by Matisse. It is a comfortable room—a bedroom-sitting room—in which I can relax and think and reflect.
What kind of person am I? I ask myself that, as I begin this effort. The answer is not simple. My life spans the century and, as I see it, I should do two things: I must narrate the more significant events in which I was a participant, especially those which influenced our world as we now know it, and I must reveal, if I can, something of myself and my world.
I wonder if I can put enough of myself in it. Am I reflective enough or personal enough? I am not a very demonstrative person. I am not good at flattering people or even complimenting them. I have worked for years with people at CBS whose skills I have admired and who have not had from me the kind of acknowledgment they deserve or would like to get. I like to believe, however, that they understand me and know how I feel about them.
Of course, I like praise myself, even flattery, and certainly I like to read a good notice when it appears, but I feel somewhat embarrassed when it is presented to me directly in person. I tend to brush it off and try to change the subject. As for unflattering or critical comments which sometimes come my way, I have an urge to reply, to correct misrepresentation, to set matters straight—which of course means putting things more in my favor. Some of that is certain to find its place here.
I don’t think I am a very easy person to know. Perhaps that is a strange thing to say at the beginning of a work like this because I hope to make myself known in this book. Yet it is my impression that although I have had a multitude of acquaintances in my life, many of whom call me friend and whom I call friend, I have had very few intimates. Apart from these few, I think I do not like the idea of depending on others. I don’t feel safe. When I find myself becoming dependent on one particular person I start to worry about what would happen if he or she were no longer there, and about who could take his or her place. Of course, I am not self-sufficient and have to lean on many people. But I always keep my reserve.
In a sort of treaty with the reader, I have decided to declare here what I will tell and not tell. As a matter of taste I will not write about my intimate personal relations. That would either be unfair to others or beyond my capacity for expression. I will take up not only the successful aspects of my life and work, but also the qualified successes in some areas, the failures in others, the good memories and the regrets.
This is a new experience for me. Until this writing, the only time I have spoken up has been for the various organizations I have represented. Now I speak for myself.
I am sure that I may have unconsciously rationalized some events, especially painful ones, to make myself feel better about them, or to present myself in a better light. Still, I do want to try to be objective. After all, presenting myself is what I am doing here.
I have enjoyed extraordinary success in life, as much as I or any American could dream of, and I leave it to the reader to judge how well I used my opportunities.
Chicago
I was a child of immigrants. They were not poor immigrants, as were so many who came from Eastern Europe and Russia in the later nineteenth century; my family was among the fortunate ones with a stake to invest in the new world. My grandfather, Isaac Paley, was well heeled enough upon his arrival in Chicago in 1888 to entertain the aristocratic notion of enjoying the freedom of the United States without actually working. His vision of life was acquired from observing the gentry of the old world, or perhaps from reading nineteenth-century Russian novels. Things did not turn out as he intended, but I cannot help wondering whether something of my grandfather’s feeling for the value of leisure and luxury did not brush off on me.
Grandfather Isaac was a tall, handsome man who wore a Vandyke beard and carried himself like a patriarch. As I remember him, he would sit next to a samovar, drinking tea and chatting with friends all day long. They did most of the talking; he did most of the listening. He had a presence that I think caused many to hold him in awe.
My father, Samuel Paley, once told me the story of how the family happened to come to the United States. My grandfather had had a rather special position among Jews in Russia. He lived in a small town called Brovary, near Kiev, and was the Czar’s representative in the town. The state functions he performed were rather modest. When anyone from the court came through the town, he had to see to it that the horses were changed and that accommodations and other services were provided for the personage and his entourage. But my grandfather’s office brought with it a certain tangible privilege. He could go wherever he wanted, in contrast to most Jews, who were confined more or less to particular neighborhoods.
If there were pogroms in the town, my father did not tell me of them. And yet, somehow, I have the notion that Grandfather Isaac thought that the time had come when emigration might be a wise course for the family. With permission to travel and also the wherewithal, as the owner of a prospering lumber business, he made a voyage to America, around 1883–84, taking his nine-year-old son, my father, to visit and see if he liked it. He did like it, returned to Russia, and apparently made plans. Four years later he moved everyone to Chicago. The entourage was considerable: himself; his wife, Zelda; my father, who was then thirteen; three other sons—William, Jacob and Benjamin; and three daughters, Sophie, Sarah and Celia.
My grandfather Isaac failed the capitalistic test. He soon lost most of his money in bad investments. But he himself was above the mere material side of life. I don’t remember his ever working for a living.
Grandmother Zelda was different, indeed the opposite of my grandfather in temperament. She was small and full of spark and punch, but she was a complainer. She would sometimes shout at my grandfather, but to no avail. He was serene. Yet, she had influence—the strength in the family, I think, came from her. My father and Uncle Jay took after her, and some of her spirit must have come down to me. As I heard the story in the family, when my grandfather lost his money, my grandmother and the older children saw that somebody had to go out and make a living. William, the eldest, and my father, who was next in age, left school and went to work. My father sold newspapers, then worked in a piano factory, and then in a cigar factory, where as an apprentice he came upon his destiny.
It was not long before my father got the idea of opening a cigar store with one cigar maker working in the front window, which was not uncommon in those days. The cigar maker, sitting at a table in the window, rolling cigars by hand, was not only functional but was an attraction and an advertisement. Passers-by would stop to watch and perhaps come in to buy. Between his factory job and his own store, my father learned all about tobacco and discovered that he had the gift of recognizing the various qualities of tobacco and of blending them in attractive combinations of flavor. It was his particular genius and became his lifelong vocation.
He must have been ambitious too in those days, carrying two jobs. His brand of cigars began selling so well that he decided to go out and sell them to other cigar stores. Eventually he gave up the factory job, put more cigar makers to work in the back room of the store, and found himself in the cigar business. It was a short step from there to opening a cigar factory of his own. He made a good product, built a business, and became successful at an early age. In 1896, the year he was naturalized at the age of twenty-one, he had probably become a millionaire.
Two years later, he married Goldie Drell, who was sixteen. Three years later, on September 28, 1901, I was born. Not long after that he moved the business and the family to Detroit. I had a nurse then (a sign of the family’s prosperity) whom I remember for only one thing, going hand-in-hand with her many times to visit photographers who would tell me to look at the birdie.
I must have been little more than three years old.
Sometime in these years my father’s best customer, a wholesaler, went bankrupt, leaving Samuel Paley with so great a loss that it virtually put him out of business. Back we went to Chicago where my father had to start over again; thereafter I had no nurse.
My father, evidently not completely broke, acquired a house for us on Marshfield Avenue, in a residential neighborhood not far west of the Loop. I long remembered it as a large house, at least fifty feet wide. The houses on the block were attached, like the brownstones of New York, but next to our home was an empty corner lot, which my father constantly talked of buying to protect that side of our house.
My life on Marshfield Avenue, as I remember it, was a child’s dream come true. The houses on the block were full of children of about my age and we played endlessly in the vacant lot and in the cellar of my house which served as a club.
Then we moved up the ladder
to an apartment on Logan Boulevard in a more elegant neighborhood of northwest Chicago. My memory blurs the borders of time, for still later we moved again to an apartment hotel in the suburb of Rogers Park. School and playmates changed, but our home life remained the center of my existence.
Our family was closely knit, and its strong inner bonds of love and tradition generated classic centripetal forces which had considerable influence on me. Father, mother, my sister Blanche and I dined together every night when my parents were home. My father was frequently away on business—and on each and every occasion he was welcomed home as a returning king. There was an aura of love in our home; our father and mother lived for each other and for the children, and we knew it.
My mother was a handsome, even beautiful woman. She was on the stout side as I first remember her, but then she decided to become thin and she became thin—which suggests a touch of vanity and more than a touch of resoluteness. Her cooking was fabulous, which led me to care about good food for the rest of my life. She catered to my father in every way, simply taking it for granted that her role in life was to make him happy and comfortable.
My father was a short man with a black mustache and intense eyes that looked out rather gaily and confidently and yet seemed somewhat startled. He always stood erect and wore a coat and vest and a high stiff collar which was then in fashion. He had an odd configuration of hair—it was full on the sides but he was bald through the middle, forming a ski-slope shape from front to back. When his full head of hair started thinning, he worried about it and he believed the then current notion that if you shaved off the thinning area, your hair would grow back full again. So he had his hair shaved off through the middle. When he came home that night and bent down to kiss me, I started to cry, That’s not my father.
But I grew accustomed to his new hair style; and I suppose he did, for the middle of his head remained forever bare.
I will never forget the very first automobile my father bought for the family and the excitement on that Saturday when we were all supposed to see the new car and meet the demonstrator, the man who was to teach my father to drive. My mother was a bit behind schedule and so I waited for her while my father and sister went ahead. When my mother and I came out, we found my father and sister gone. Apparently they had started without us. We waited impatiently. Finally, we saw my father and sister walking toward us, alone and without the car. I’ll never forget the expression on my father’s face. It seems that while turning a corner, my father was told to push the brake pedal. Instead he put his foot down on the accelerator and the car ran into a brick building at considerable speed. The new car was demolished. Two weeks later, another car was delivered, an Overland. My mother drove it; even I, although under age, drove it short distances to and from the garage. My father bought other cars, a Winton, a Cadillac and others. But he never drove again.
Such incidents stand out in my memory because they were so rare. My father earned and commanded the total respect of his family. He was a very capable businessman, loved all aspects of his growing cigar business, and at dinner would tell us in great detail what had happened that day. I was fascinated. From the time I was a young child, there was no doubt in my mind—or his—that I would get an education and then go into his business and succeed him. I admired him enormously and thought of doing great things to help him.
If I learned the sense of the life of leisure and relaxation from my grandfather Isaac, I certainly learned the fascination of work from my father. He was too busy becoming a successful businessman for me to develop an intimate relationship with him when I was growing up, but the bonds of love and respect were always there unshakably. From as far back as I can remember, whenever we met, we kissed each other on the cheek, and we kept to that tradition all his life, even in public, including the occasions when we came together in meetings with the directors of CBS.
Although we lived in unquestioned consciousness of being Jews, my family was divided on the religious aspect of being Jewish. Neither my grandfather Isaac nor my father showed much interest in religious formalities. But since my mother was more religious than my father, they would go together to the Reform synagogue on the High Holy Days. Mother’s father, Morris Drell, was a student of the Torah, a dedicated scholar who spent his whole day studying and interpreting it. He was a member of an Orthodox synagogue and made religion the center of his life.
Every Friday night we would go to my grandfather Morris’ house where he recited the ceremonial blessing over wine and bread on the eve of the Sabbath. To me, an uncomprehending child, it was worse than boring. I had to listen to prayers in Hebrew which I didn’t understand. I often thought how wonderful it would be when I was grown up and would not have to go there every Friday night.
My grandfather Morris had done all he could to keep me in the old faith, but to no avail. He walked five miles to the synagogue for my confirmation because Orthodox Jews are not permitted to drive in cars on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath. I did have the honor of standing up alone before the congregation to recite the Ten Commandments in Hebrew, even though I had memorized the text phonetically and did not understand a single word. It was a measure, however, a true measure of the cultural distance between the two sides of my family.
In Chicago my family lived a modest middle-class life, occasionally going to the theater and having parties with friends at home. My mother would often stay home, preferring, she said, to use the time to prepare the after-theater supper. She would say to my father, Why don’t you take Willie with you?
Thus, to my delight, I went to plays at an early age. Then I got a job on Saturdays as a sort of candy-butcher
in Chicago theaters. I would march up and down the aisles of the balcony with a tray, hawking candy and other treats, and I would see the play. The first performance I ever saw on this job, ironically, was called It Pays to Advertise. As I remember that play, an advertising man came up with a brilliant idea to save a soap company from imminent bankruptcy. He proposed that it advertise and sell a soap to be called Number 13 Soap—Unlucky for Dirt.
The soap was a huge success and the company was saved! I was surprised that no one ever used that slogan in the real world. It made a big impression on me.
New Year’s Eve was always an important night for a party in our home. Family and close friends would gather to talk and drink and, I guess, get a little tipsy. My father would dance the gezotski (more properly the kozak), which he had learned as a child in Russia. He had short but strong legs. With ten or twelve plates placed in a close circle, he would dance around and between the plates and never break a one. At almost every party, anywhere, someone would say, Sam, come up and do your dance.
He was a good dancer and continued dancing to a very advanced age. I never learned the gezotski or any folk dance but I took to ballroom dancing and the dreamy and close body dances of the twenties when my turn came later.
My father was very neat and orderly, almost to a fault. Every moment of his life was planned in fine detail. And he was a hypochondriac, imagining all kinds of ailments for which he hurried to his doctor and took medicines of all kinds. My mother did the opposite: she never complained, threw away doctors’ prescriptions and got well on her own. Some say that I tend to be a hypochondriac. I deny it. At times I have been more concerned about my health than my mother was about hers, but I have not come anywhere near the real hypochondria of my father.
• • •
My father was a very gentle man, but when he got angry he got terribly angry. One night when I was just old enough to drive, I asked him if I could have the car. Yes, if you’re home by eleven o’clock,
he said. Out riding with some friends, I forgot all about the time and my promise. I got home at one o’clock and found my father waiting for me in a state of fierce temper. I had disappointed him—in more ways than one, he said. You remember when I asked you to be home at eleven, a friend of mine was present? After you left, my friend said to me, ‘You know damn well he’s not going to be home by eleven.’ And I said, ‘My son, when he says he’s going to be home by eleven, he’ll be home by eleven.’ I took a very strong stand, and you let me down, son, you let me down.
I was crushed. But it didn’t improve my character.
Not long afterward I was stopped for speeding while having one arm around a girl. The officer took my name, address and telephone number, and said that instead of giving me a ticket he was going to call my father and tell him about it. Terrified, I rushed home and appealed to the desk clerk of our apartment hotel: Do me a big favor. When that call comes in on the switchboard, pretend you’re my father, please, and take the message.
The officer did call. The clerk answered and said, Yes, this is Mr. Paley, what is it? Really? He did that? My God! What a bad boy he is. I’ll see that he’s properly punished for it.
I escaped my father’s wrath but not the guilt, and I was troubled by what I had done.
The birth of my sister, Blanche, on May 11, 1905, when I was nearly four years old, affected my life profoundly, even at the very beginning. My mother and father had asked me what I wanted for my birthday, and I gave a classic reply: a baby sister. (I wonder if or how they planted that idea in my mind.) One night there was a commotion in the house. The next morning my father came in to me and said, ‘Well, you have your wish. You have a baby sister."
I was taken to my mother’s room where she had given birth to a daughter. I saw this tiny object in a crib and thought my parents were fooling me. She looked like a doll, so, just to check, I put my finger in her eye. She screamed, of course, and already I was in trouble.
Now with a real baby sister, I came to be unhappy about my request. It seemed logical that if I hadn’t asked for her, we wouldn’t have had her. As the older child, I was typically jealous of her for taking my place as the favorite.
Not long after my sister was born I got the feeling that my mother did not approve of me or did not think I was as good as she wanted me to be. As we grew up, my mother gave so much attention to my sister that I thought she regarded me as less worthy. She also made comparisons between me and other boys. Then and there a strong ambition was generated in me to be a success. I wanted to prove to her or anybody else who found fault with me that Darn it, one day I’ll show you!
Along with my own conflicting self-esteem, I had both a strong love for my mother and an antagonism to her. And yet I wanted to be with her. I remember one occasion when she started to go downtown and I followed her along the street. She told me to go back to the house. And I wouldn’t go back. Finally she turned around in exasperation and said, Okay, let’s go back home then.
When we got home she took me to the basement and gave me a whipping—one to be remembered.
The worst of it all was my impression that she did not find me attractive. She would complain: other children were brighter than I was; they looked better, or did something better; when I got clothes, the clothes never looked right on me; everybody else looked neater. I am not sure now if she really felt that way about me or was just trying to make me try harder. But the effect on me was a feeling of inferiority. I felt sorry for myself. I believed I was born unattractive.
This complicated relationship with my mother was eased when I got into the outside world. When at the age of about twelve, I went to my first dance, given by a neighbor on Logan Boulevard, I sat like a wallflower. One girl in particular made it clear somehow that she liked me and wanted to dance with me. Another did the same. I was surprised and thought at first that they were fooling, but apparently they weren’t. It occurred to me for the first time that I could be attractive and that put me in a good state of mind about how girls might feel about me. There was no question about how I felt about them.
I had an early passion for reading, especially for Horatio Alger stories. I went to the public library almost every day, and when I found a Horatio Alger book I had not read before, it was like finding a gold mine. I would read late into the night with great excitement about disadvantaged young men who worked hard, were virtuous and ended up marrying the boss’s daughter or getting rich. My mother was forever telling me to turn off the light and get to sleep. But I remained intrigued by the Horatio Alger heroes.
At school I was often a good student, sometimes an indifferent one, and on occasion a poor one. It all depended, it seemed, on circumstances. At first, things went badly in the grammar school near Marshfield Avenue—a school, I must say, whose methods were devised without sensitivity to the minds of children, or as we would say today, of any understanding of child psychology.
At eight or nine years of age I got over my strong desire to stay at home to be near my mother. But I still didn’t like school. I took extreme measures to avoid going to school: I would pretend to be ill, or would inflict some minor injury on myself to justify not going. I played hooky and signed my mother’s name to excuse slips. On more than one occasion I crawled out of the classroom while the teacher’s back was turned. And all for one reason: I felt put down by the school, and indeed I was put down, quite literally.
The school operated on a system designed to crush the morale of half its students. Each class divided the bright students, who were assigned one side of the classroom, from the presumed less-than-bright ones, assigned the other side. The farther down front you were on either side, the brighter you were; the farther back, the more stupid. I spent miserable days in the last row of the lower side, which had only one advantage: I could easily slip out to freedom.
One day the teacher announced a special fifteen-minute recess, a break in our routine, and because I was not feeling well, I sat and dozed with a book open in front of me. When all the children were back from the recess, the teacher asked me to stand up. I stood up, wondering what I had done now, and the teacher solemnly addressed the class, saying that while all of them had gone out to play, I had stayed behind to read and to prepare myself for the next lesson, whereupon she moved me from the lower to the upper half of the class.
I had not deserved to be branded stupid and I did not, of course, deserve to be commended for being a devoted student, but the combination of these artifices changed my life at school. No longer did I skip classes. Through the remaining years of grammar school, through high school, and into college, I ranked first, second, or third in my class. My career as a good student lasted until the end of my first semester at the University of Chicago, when the dean wrote to my father that I was one of the best students ever. Then something happened, and I ended that year in the lower part of my class.
Before then, and when I was old enough, I worked for my father in his factory during the summers. I swept floors, ran errands, looked around and learned. Father sent me to the banding department where they put the bands around the cigars and I learned how to do that. He sent me to the kitchen,
where they mixed tobaccos and I learned how to do that. Almost every day I walked or ran to the downtown post office to buy federal bonding stamps, one of which had to go on each box of cigars. I would get the cash and run downtown, get the stamps and run back. I would try to see how fast I could make it and I got to be very fast, always striving to be better than before.
As a child I learned that I had a good ear for music, perfect pitch, so that I was able to tell if a note was even a fraction off. My mother took me to a concert given by Mischa Elman on probably his first concert tour in America, when he was a young lad in short pants. He played the violin so beautifully that I decided then and there that I wanted to become a violinist. But the violin teacher we consulted turned me down because I could not sing notes perfectly at the right pitch. I was crushed. Instead, I studied the piano for years, taking lessons from successively more advanced teachers, and I did very well. I even gave a concert once and there was some thought of my making a career as a pianist. But I never really liked the piano all that much and my piano playing came to an end when I went away to school.
In the fall of 1917 my family sent me away to complete my high school education at the Western Military Academy in Alton, Illinois. I put on cadet uniforms, shined my buttons, stood at attention for examination every morning, drilled at times during the day, fought mock battles and twice a week went to town—Alton—for candy bars. When you wanted to show yourself to be an independent creature, you bought snuff from a dealer who came around the school. You put it on your lips and little by little took some on your tongue and swallowed it. That made you one of the boys. I tried it just once, got sick, and gave it up forever.
That year marked a turning point in my life: I was away from home for the first time and I overcame being homesick and got used to being on my own. When I had left home, I was quite short; at the Academy I sprouted. I grew so fast I needed three sets of uniforms in one year. The isolation was good for studies. In that one year I accumulated two years of high school credits and was admitted to the University of Chicago at seventeen. I also met the qualifications to enter the Army as a second lieutenant, except for my age, and my father, who refused to give his permission. This was a heavy blow to me. I wanted to be an officer and wear one of those Sam Browne belts diagonally across my chest. A Sam Browne belt signified, at least to my mind, that you were an officer who had served overseas and that you were a hero.
I started in a college dormitory and then was admitted to a fraternity, Zeta Beta Tau. The fraternity house was a new life and great fun.
At Chicago I was at or near the top of my class—until I fell in love. She was a lovely young woman, older than I, my first true love. She was the most exciting person I had met to that time. She lived far out on the north side of Chicago, but that did not stop me. Every night I would go out there by streetcar and elevated train, arriving late in the evening. I would leave her in the middle of the night and get back to college in time for only a couple of hours sleep, and with little time for study. Failing to manage both love and study, I chose love. I just squeaked through the second semester.
We separated only because of Samuel Gompers. In 1919, Gompers, himself an immigrant from England, and a cigar maker, as well as founder and lifetime president of the American Federation of Labor, sanctioned another strike against my father’s cigar factory. There had been many before. My father decided to relocate, and so he and I took the train east.
Going East
The Great War had ended, New York was alive with the spirit of the new times, and the streets were thronged with streetcars, automobiles, carts and horses and people moving at a much faster pace than they did in Chicago. It was a great, tall city and I was enchanted. While my father went about his business, I investigated the reputation of New York as the most sinful city in the world. On my first outing alone, I walked down one avenue for three or four blocks, expecting to be accosted by New York women who, I had been told in Chicago, fell into the arms of any young attractive man. When I was not accosted, I felt discouraged. It never occurred to me that my information might be wrong. I tried a Broadway hotel which, according to my information, was known as a gathering place for the most glamorous people of all. There were indeed glamorous women present but no one saw fit to send me a note or even a seductive glance. At seventeen years of age, it was depressing. Youth was not to be served anything but lunch. I tasted none of the city’s pleasures. Most of the time I followed my father around or waited for him while he investigated the possibilities of opening a new factory on the East Coast.
I indulged in another fantasy which was to stay with me longer than my youthful naïveté regarding women. My hard-working father had often spoken of eventually retiring to an orange grove in California. As soon as I have $25,000, we’re going to move to California,
he would say, and we’re going to buy an orange grove and have a little house and we’re going to have a marvelous time.
I, too, dreamed about that orange grove as the ultimate goal in life. I could really visualize myself picking an orange off the tree and sitting under the tree and eating the orange. It would be a lovely, lazy life. When I wasn’t eating oranges, I would be a beachcomber on a nearby beach. So, every once in a while in Chicago I would ask my father, Dad, how much money do you have?
Why?
he would reply.
Have you got the $25,000?
No, I haven’t,
he would say.
One day, however, I said, You must have $25,000 by now.
Yes, I have.
How about the orange grove?
I asked.
Well,
he replied, you know . . . it isn’t convenient for me to go out and buy that orange grove now.
In New York, approaching my eighteenth birthday, I made plans for the future and my orange grove. My horizon for aging was thirty-five, which was nine years younger than my father was at that time. It came over me then as a firm conviction that I was going to be rich when I was thirty-five. And I decided that at thirty-five I would retire and spend the rest of my life as a beachcomber, with or without an orange grove. But I would have complete freedom. I thought quite a bit about it and recognized that my father and men like him got caught up in the web of business and constantly postponed retirement and the pleasures of leisure. In order not to get caught that way myself, I made an oath to myself and a solemn vow that I would retire, no matter what, at age thirty-five. Having made that vow, I imagined it a personal deal that I had made with God, or some superior being, which meant, logically, that if I did not live up to my oath, I would be punished.
My father found a site for his new cigar factory in Philadelphia rather than in New York, and no sooner had he taken the space, ordered equipment, and engaged a foreman than he received word from Chicago that my grandfather Isaac had died. He rushed back to Chicago, leaving me to supervise the Philadelphia factory for what he expected would be a few days. Business and family affairs kept him in Chicago for almost a month. While he was away, I took charge in Philadelphia. After all, I had been my father’s protégé. I had absorbed his business philosophy at the dinner table, worked summers in the Chicago plant, and understood the cigar business as much if not better than any well-taught young apprentice.
My first task was to hire cigar makers for the new plant, mostly women, as was the custom in Philadelphia, but no sooner had I begun than the entire cigar industry in Philadelphia was struck over working conditions. However, I went out and argued with the union leaders and workers that it was unfair to strike our new plant over working conditions since no one had yet ever worked for us. I promised the workers higher wages and better working conditions than any other cigar factory in the area because we were producing a better-grade and more expensive cigar. I also gave bonuses to girls who would find other girls to work in the new plant, provided picnics, boat trips and free entertainment, and succeeded in hiring all the workers we needed to start. Then, the first sign of real trouble came not from the union but from the president of the local association of cigar manufacturers. He charged into Father’s office, intending to demand that we stop our operation. But he stopped short when he found sitting behind the boss’s desk a teenager. Nevertheless, when our identities were straightened out, he said in a threatening voice, You can’t run your factory while we are having a strike. You must close down. We don’t want to give those girls an outlet to work anywhere else.
I became as angry as he was, for I knew where my loyalties belonged. I was adamant in telling him that we would not be influenced by threats and intended to go about our business of making and selling cigars. By the time my father returned with the family, we had the Philadelphia plant running full force.
The responsibility thrust upon me by my father and my ability to stand up to that irate cigar manufacturer marked a turning point: I became conscious of the fact that my boyhood had ended and that there were things in the world I could do and do well.
I returned to college that fall, at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, where the curriculum was divided between business and liberal arts courses. (I continued working for my father during the summers.) My factory experience had propelled me into adulthood and at college this time I took my studies seriously enough to get by. But I had no drive to excel in the classroom as I had in earlier years. In another little revolution, I became half student, half playboy. I threw myself into the heady life of the Roaring Twenties and began to enjoy college life enormously.
While I was at college, my father gave me a moderate but quite adequate allowance, and yet when a good business proposition came my way one year, I grabbed it. It was a new-style shirt with an attached collar and it buttoned down. An alumnus fraternity brother who had become a wholesale shirt salesman showed the fraternity boys the new kind of shirt and I decided to go into business. I ordered a huge load of those shirts, because the more you bought the lower the unit price. I recruited football heroes, baseball players, track stars, and all kinds of people whose popularity, I thought, might make them supersalesmen on campus. I paid them a generous commission and made myself a healthy profit of about $1,000.
While my allowance was strict, my father was not stingy. He gave me an Essex automobile which helped make me become noticed on campus. In my senior year I became head of the fraternity.
In the late spring of 1922, after leaving college, I went to work full time for the Congress Cigar Company. My father gave me a salary of twenty-five dollars a week, no title, and one big assignment. He called me into his office one day and announced that the company had intended to build a combined factory and office building which he hoped would be the most up-to-date one in the industry. You will be in charge of the whole project, the plans, construction and everything.
I was not surprised at his willingness to trust me with so great a responsibility. It was his style of management. He ran the production end of the business, and as his young lieutenant I was expected to learn all the other operations of his company.
After some investigation, I decided that the key to the new plant would be central air conditioning, and we put in what I believe was the first such system in the cigar manufacturing business. Natural weather was often either too dry and made the tobacco crack and crumble or too damp, which made the tobacco soggy and too closely packed in the cigar. The conditions increased the cost of the cigars. An important amount was saved once the factory was opened and operations went at full tilt. Our new factory at Third and Spruce was a beautiful building, eight stories high, and colonial in style.
My father’s investment in the new plant was a sign not only that his business was doing well but also that he expected it to expand even further. Samuel Paley was ready to ride the economic wave of the twenties: he had standardized his product years earlier, at about the time that Henry Ford standardized his, but of course the operation was on a much smaller scale. To facilitate economies in production, my father stopped making numerous varieties of cigars and concentrated on a single brand, La Palina (a play on the family name), which