Author Archives: Roger W. Smith

About Roger W. Smith

Roger W. Smith is a writer and independent scholar based in New York City. His experience includes freelance writing and editing, business writing, book reviewing, and the teaching of writing and literature as an adjunct professor at St. John’s University. Mr. Smith's interests include personal essays and opinion pieces; American and world literature; culture, especially books and reading; classical music; current issues that involve social, moral, and philosophical views; and experiences of daily living from a ground level perspective. Sites on WordPress hosted by Mr. Smith include: (1) rogersgleanings.com (a personal site comprised of essays on a wide range of topics) ; (2) rogers-rhetoric.com (covering principles and practices of writing); (3) roger-w-smiths-dreiser.site (devoted to the author Theodore Dreiser); and (4) pitirimsorokin.com (devoted to sociologist and social philosopher Pitirim A. Sorokin).

word control (same as pest control?)

 

See:

word control (same as pest control?)

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   August 2025

Juan Ramón Jiménez: Bibliografía

 

Bibliografia

 

A comprehensive Jiménez bibliography is posted above as a PDF. It was published in:

Francisco Garfias

Juan Ramón Jiménez

Madrid: Taurus Ediciones, S. A., 1958

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

    June 2025

John McCain on immigration

 

McCain quote

 

“I wish every American who out of ignorance or worse curses immigrants as criminals or a drain on ·the country’s resources or a threat to our ‘culture’ could have been there. I would like them to know that immigrants, many of them having entered the country illegally, are making sacrifices for Americans that many Americans would not make for them.” — John McCain

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   June 2025

Music brings it all back.

 

I shared my post

50’s (and some early 60’s) songs

with a friend from high school. This led to an exchange of emails between us.

I wrote the following:

There is something about music — this is often true of popular music — that it embeds itself in your brain so that you recall exactly how it sounded when you first heard it and what your state of mind was at the time.

It was a Saturday night in 1956 (I think), and my older brother and I were watching the Tommy and Jimmy Dorsey show on TV. Elvis Presley, whom we had both never heard of, sings “Heartbreak Hotel.”

Johnny Cash sings “I Walk the Line” on another show.

The Diamonds “Litle Darlin’,” probably on American Bandstand; and “A Teenager in Love” (Dion and the Belmonts, who were — how would I have known it then? — from the Bronx, a place I never heard of.).

Richie Valens “Oh, Donna.” Such direct emotion, which I could only experience vicariously then

In junior high, in the lunchroom, there is dancing. Paul Anka’s “Put Your Head on My Shoulder.” Kids dancing close.

I am in the sixth grade in our barbershop on Mass Ave. An Elvis song is playing on the radio: “I Want You, I Need You, I Love You.” If only I could be another Elvis.

I am transported back fully to my state of mind as a preteen at the Agassiz School in Cambridge, and our house near Harvard Square. My emotions, then, my “worldview” (such as it was), my yearnings.

When I went to a Pat Boone movie in Harvard Square and heard him sing the tacky song “April Love” and flip hamburgers in a cookout scene while wearing a chef’s hat (and crooning). Me in my bedroom in Cambridge hearing Pat Boone’s hit “I Almost Lost My Mind” on the radio over and over again. I was doing something like playing a card or board game with myself or flipping through magazines — Sport magazine (not to be confused with Sports Illustrated) was a favorite of mine. Also fan magazines about Elvis and other rock stars which I bought at the Montrose Spa on Mass Ave.

The teen (and preteen) emotions we had.

The things that excited us.

Music brings it all back.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

    June 2025

Roger Smith, Cambridge, MA, 1957

new vocabulary, February-May 2025

 

new vocababluary, February-May 2025

 

— posted by Roger W Smith

   June 2, 2025

APBA

 

Beginning in the sixth grade, when we were still living in Cambridge, I became an avid reader of baseball articles in Sport magazine. There was an advertisement in Sport for a table baseball game called APBA. (I did not know it at the time, but the letters stood for American Professional Baseball Association.) It looked intriguing. I responded to the ad and materials came in the mail that made me very desirous of purchasing the game. The price was $18.75, which seemed a little steep then, though it was actually quite reasonable in view of the product and turned out to be incredibly so in view of the hours of enjoyment I got out of the game.

There was a foldout brochure. And, there was a sample player card for Ted Williams! The brochure included an account of and box score for a simulated game replaying a 1957 World Series game between the Yankees and Milwaukee Braves in which Warren Spahn struck out 14 batters (in the simulated game, that is). It seemed so real, and the idea of a table game where you could play Major League baseball games at home with real players intrigued me. I was hooked.

My older brother and I purchased the game. It was, as I have noted above, a baseball simulation table game using cards to represent each major league player and boards to represent different on-base scenarios e.g. Bases Empty , Runners on First and Third, Bases Loaded with the results corresponding to the roll of the dice and the corresponding number on a player s card, with the roll of the dice used to generate random numbers. You would check the board for a given situation (runner on first, say) to see the result. Funny things could happen: an injury, an ejection, a rainout.

The game could be played against another person or in solitaire fashion. I always played games by myself, so that I was managing both teams (making the lineup, substitutions, pitching changes, etc.), and I announced them out loud as the game progressed. (I had vague thoughts about becoming a baseball announcer and admired announcers such as the Red Sox s Curt Gowdy and Ned Martin.)

I kept score for each game and recorded statistics in a ruled notebook. It was amazing that, in most cases, the players performances came close to matching their real life statistics. (The individual cards represented real players, and had ratings for batting, fielding, base running, pitching, and so forth.) You could make managerial decisions: elect to bunt, say; or stipulate in advance that on a single, a runner should not try to advance to an extra base because the runner was rated as slow.

Some funny results occurred.

In one simulated game that I was playing, for example, Tom (Ploughboy) Morgan was pitching for the Detroit Tigers. I seem to recall that the score was 10-0 in favor of the Tigers, partly because Morgan, who was pitching in relief in the simulated game, had hit a grand slam home run.

In real life, Morgan, in 1959, the season on which his APBA player card was based, hit two homeruns in twenty-three at bats. This gave him as an excellent rating on his APBA player card as a power hitter.

If you got the result of a 23 or 41 i.e., this result on the game board corresponding to whatever the dice roll showed you would get something unusual, say an injury, a rainout, an ejection, or a weird play.

The Tigers, as I said, were leading by around 10-0 somewhere well into the simulated game and the opposing team batter got a dice roll of 26 (or some such number), which I think corresponded to a 23 on the game board, with a result that on the game board read ball pitcher ejected for disputing umpire s call. The Tigers were leading by ten runs or so at the time (in the simulated game I was playing).

Each year, APBA would come out with a complete set of player cards, based on the prior season’s results, that cost six dollars. They would mail rosters to game owners in advance. When the rosters came out, I would scan them eagerly. In those days, there were eight teams in each league, and each team played 154 games in a season. I played just over half a season, over 300 games, for the 1959 National League, kept box scores for each game, and compiled statistics.

The company s headquarters were at 118 E. James St. In Lancaster, Pennsylvania. It turned out that the company was a single statistically minded baseball fan, J. Richard Seitz, who had created the game in 1951 and marketed it from his home.

In the summer of 1962, my father, mother, younger brother, sister, and I took to trip to Pennsylvania to visit my older brother, who had a summer job there. We took a side trip and drove through the beautiful Amish Country, making a stop in Lancaster, which I had requested.

It took my father a while to find 118 E. James Street. We finally found it and it was just an ordinary house. It turned out that it was the residence of APBA developer and owner Seitz and his mother.

We went to the post office to inquire and were told by a friendly postal clerk that, yes, we had the right address and that Seitz occasionally stopped at the post office to mail APBA games to costumers.

Around this time, the company came out with a pro football game with player cards with ratings for running, passing, kicking, blocking, and defense.

My father got me the APBA football game, which I had requested, for my birthday. They had a policy of usually requiring two to three weeks for shipping, but my Dad wrote them a letter pleading for expedited delivery and got it in about three days. Then he handed me an envelope that had, in the return address on front, the APBA Game Company and their address, below which my father had written “from a big game company” with his own cartoon-ish drawing of a factory building with smokestacks and smoke billowing from them.

The APBA football game had player cards representing the 1958 NFL season. That was the season of the championship game between the Colts and Giants which the Colts won in overtime on Alan Ameche s touchdown run. I played that game over and over again with the APBA simulated table game, and I also played games with various other teams such as the Browns, Rams, and Packers.

Once, my older brother and I decided to replay the Colts-Giants playoff game against one another. I forget which team each of us chose. But, at the end of the game, my team was behind by a few points and I had the ball on something like the opposition s 27-yard line. The way the game was designed (each play represented a designated portion of the clock ), I had one play left.

The APBA football game required you to make coaching decisions. My older brother set his defense, wisely, for a pass play. I rolled boxcars, two sixes, on the dice. This roll of dice would give you the best result for a given situation. There were boards for end run, plunge play, short pass, and long pass; I had elected short pass. For that situation, and, taking into account the respective team ratings for offense (blocking) and defense, the result was disappointing. The gain on the play was one yard short of a touchdown. I was certain that for a dice roll of boxcars, I had scored a touchdown. (If I had chosen a long pass or run, I would have scored.) I was so frustrated and upset, I actually started to cry. It seemed that my older brother always won.

My time spent playing APBA board games comprised some of the happiest moments of my life.

— posted by Roger W. Smith

 

 

post updated

 

“The Holy City”

 

who got railroaded?

 

 

ADX Florence

 

The following story came to my attention yesterday: that President Trump is considering pardons for participants involved in a plot to kidnap Michigan governor Gretchen Whitmer. In comments at a swearing-in ceremony for the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro.

See “Trump weighs pardons of people convicted for Whitmer’s 2020 kidnapping plot,” by Amanda Friedman, Politico, May 28, 2025

https://www.politico.com/news/2025/05/28/trump-whitmer-kidnapping-pardon-00372633

“Trump,” it is noted in the article, “insinuated that the trial had not been handled correctly by the legal system.”

“I will look at it — take a look at it,” he said when asked if he is considering pardons. “It’s been brought to my attention, I did watch the trial. It looked to me like somewhat of a railroad job, I’ll be honest with you. It looked to me like some people said some stupid things.”

“They were drinking and I think they said stupid things but I’ll take a look at that, and a lot of people are asking me that question from both sides actually,” he continued. “A lot of people think they got railroaded.”

The leaders of the kidnapping plot, Barry Croft Jr. and Adam Fox, were convicted in 2022 of conspiring to abduct the governor from her vacation home. Croft, who also faced weapons charges, received a prison sentence of nearly 20 years. Fox was sentenced to 16 years.

 

*****************************************************

This brings to mind (mine) the following post of mine:

“British Man Sentenced to 40 Years in Al Qaeda Plot”

re: “British Man Sentenced to 40 Years in Al Qaeda Plot”

It concerns the case of Minh Quang Pham. He is incarcerated in ADX Florence, the supermax prison in Colorado. His release date is March 27, 2051.

Note what Trump says: “A lot of people think they got railroaded.” This is Trump’s way of (i.e., Trumpian) dissembling.

Pham, an operative for Al Qaeda’s affiliate in Yemen, agreed to carry out an attack targeting Americans and Israelis at Heathrow Airport in London.

He never carried out the attack.

Pham pleaded guilty to three terrorism-related charges and was sentenced to 40 years in May 2016. His lawyer had asked the judge to impose a 30-year sentence, the minimum.

One commentator who read my post wrote: “The minimum sentence was 30 years. I would have given him 50. In any event, it is good to know that when I’m flying overseas in the future, this bad ass will be in jail.”

There was little sympathy for Mr. Pham.

He did some “stupid things.” (Read my post for more details about how he got involved in the purported plot and then desisted.)

He did not have a Donald J. Trump to advocate for him.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   May 29, 2025

posts on immigration

 

 

photo by Roger W. Smith

 

I have reposted my post on immigration from June 2018

immigration policy, Walt Whitman, and Donald Trump’s wall; or, the Berlin Wall redux

 

Plus, see my post

Sympathy has nothing to do with it.

”Sympathy has nothing to do with it.”

 

— Roger W. Smith

   May 26, 2025

”Sympathy has nothing to do with it.”

‘Two Bakers Face Trump’s Immigration Wrath’ – NY Times 5-17-2025

 

Sympathy has nothing to do with it. In the words of one Trump supporter, who said: “Sympathy has nothing to do with it. The law is the law.”

Oh, really?

He was commenting on the case of Leonardo Baez and his wife, Nora Alicia Avila, proprietors of a bakery in Los Fresnos, Texas. They have been charged with conspiring to transport and harbor undocumented migrants and face sentences of up to ten years in prison.

See:

‘Whom Shall I Fear?’ In South Texas, Two Bakers Face Trump’s Immigration Wrath.

By Edgar Sandoval

The New York Times

May 17, 2025

“Harboring charges used to be saved for cases where criminal groups would help smuggle undocumented people into the U.S. illegally,” one of the lawyers for the couple, Jaime Diez, said.

*****************************************************

This is another example of cruelty masked as policy

Every law is not enforced. Is not and has not ever been the case. If the law were enforced this way — by Stephen Miller type idealogues totally lacking in humanity — half the population would have criminal records and there would not be enough jails, or personnel to staff them.

I am not a legal scholar or expert, but I know whether to bring criminal prosecutions is a “judgment call” in many cases. Common sense — or whatever one would call it — is required.

The law should not be used as a weapon.

Read the Times article and tell me what you think.

 

— posted by Roger W. Smith

   May 2025