Showing posts with label City of Chicago Protocol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City of Chicago Protocol. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 20, 2019

A Chicago Alderman’s Etiquette Class

The Chicago Tribune has had a long history of highlighting etiquette in Chicago. Thankfully, the etiquette enthusiast  highlighted in the article below, gets the etiquette right. Sadly, opposed to this 1930’s pamphlet by Helen Bartlett, the newspaper’s Etiquette Editor, 50 years earlier. The place setting has the forks on the wrong side of the plate!

Kids’ Etiquette Class Finds Courtesy is the Main Course 

Alderman William Henry (24th) would like to see his young constituents in the West Side Lawndale neighborhood escape poverty. He would therefore want them to learn which is the salad fork and the proper way to eat soup. The two matters, he says, are closely related. “
We are trying to get our young folks not to feel they have a ghetto mentality,” he said. “We are trying to give them exposure to the best things in life.”And so he has created a 10-week class in etiquette for children in his ward. The 33 young people in the class lunched in the Berghoff Restaurant Monday to test their new skills.

Under the watchful eye of etiquette consultant Carolyn Shelton, they daintily held their forks and knives and cut bite-sized pieces of meat. Girls wore skirts. Boys wore jackets. Henry wore a double-breasted gray suit, a cream-on-cream shirt and a blue tie and matching handkerchief in his jacket. He circulated among the young diners, some of whom had not fully grasped the principles of fine dining. “Alderman,” one young lady asked, “where do I wipe this damn knife at?” Henry was dismayed. She was contrite. '”I’m sorry,'” she said, correcting her language, if not her table manners. '”Where do I wipe this knife at?”

Henry acknowledged that etiquette is not a high priority in the City Council. He said he is disappointed in the lack of courtesy on the council floor. “The proper language of respect is, ‘Mr. President, I rise to support, or to oppose, my distinguished colleague from the 44th Ward, or the 1st Ward,’” he said. It is rare that an Alderman is referred to as “distinguished colleague,” he said. On the contrary, Alderman Bernard Stone (50th) once called Alderman Luis Gutierrez (26th) “you little pipsqueak.” Henry said his distinguished colleagues “probably need some classes.”

The classes have taught Laquita Crockett, 12, a new way to walk. Before, “if you walked down the street, you walk all crazy, try to walk all cool,” she said. Shelton “told us to walk like young women.” Shelton has taught them good posture, proper dress and personal hygiene. For some, it is reinforcement of lessons from home. Shelton told the girls that young ladies do not chew gum outside their homes. Laquita no longer does so. Under Shelton’s tutelage, she has also been practicing eating chicken with a knife and fork. Shelton said that nice young people do not wear plastic curl caps in public. Danielle Hill, 12, has given up her curly hairstyle.

She has insisted on respect for elders, a lesson Sabrina Johnson, 11, paraphrased as, “You’re not supposed to stomp your feet and curse back at them.” It is a matter of self-respect, said Shelton, a Chicagoan and eldest of nine children reared in public housing in Houston. “I’m teaching them how to like themselves, how to clean their bodies, how to say ‘please’ and ‘thank you,’” she said. Young people with self-respect will be less likely to become teenage parents. “I tell them, ‘You can’t wear shorts with everything hanging out. You can’t wear a blouse with everything hanging out.’” 
The boys have learned such expressions of outward respect as holding a chair out for a girl. The girls approve. “They treat us,” said Patricia Thompson, 15, “like a gentleman is supposed to treat a lady.” 

The program is free to young people and will cost the Alderman’s office about $2,500. Monday’s lunch was co-sponsored by the Berghoff and the Illinois Restaurant Association. Henry will award cash prizes to five participants at the end. He is hoping that the program can be expanded next year with corporate support. His enthusiasm stems from his own youth, when he attended a church-sponsored program he describes as “kind of a finishing school.” “I had to learn to play the ‘Star-Spangled Banner’ on the piano at the age of 12,” he said. He was also taught military marching and that essential inner city skill, golf. He still hates golf. But he believes that the courtesy he learned there and from a strict mother served him well, and will do the same for another generation.

The young people say they are delighted to learn etiquette, but some have found that old friends have not greeted their new ways with courtesy. “They say I was stupid to go to class to learn to walk when I already know how to walk,” said Danielle, who used her own sense of etiquette to respond. “I told them they were being stupid to say I was stupid because I want to learn.” – Barbara Brotman, Chicago Tribune, 1987



Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia

Wednesday, May 29, 2019

A ‘Second City’ Etiquette Faux Pas

According to Martin Oberman, “By the time people reach responsible levels of government, they should have already learned basic etiquette, and it's not something we should be spending $35,000 for.” As the major city’s first female mayor, she wanted to create an “international image” for Chicago. Clearly, staffing her office was not Jane Byrne’s forté! – According to the Chicago Tribune, in only her first two years as mayor, she went through a staggering four police superintendents, four press secretaries, three city controllers, three budget chiefs and three planning chiefs. – Photo Chicago Tribune


New Protocol Chief in Chicago 

“Chicago's Mayor, Jane Byrne, has hired the former operator of the North Shore School of Etiquette, Noreen McBride, to fill the newly created position of director of protocol.
The job pays $35,000 a year, and one City Alderman, Martin Oberman, yesterday called it ‘a complete waste of money.’
He said, ‘By the time people reach responsible levels of government, they should have already learned basic etiquette, and it's not something we should be spending $35,000 for.’
Not so, replied Mrs. Byrne. ‘Mrs. McBride will help coordinate the proper etiquette, dress requirements and seating arrangements at formal city ceremonies and dinners,’ she said.
Long tagged with a ‘Second City’ label, Chicago is ‘becoming an international city and we needed someone with Mrs. McBride's background,’ said a spokesman for the Mayor.” – New York Times, Feb. 5, 1981
A Dismissed Protocol Chief Finds the Proper Etiquette  
What is the correct behavior for a government official who comes under embarrassing public criticism? According to Chicago's $35,000-a-year etiquette adviser, Noreen McBride, the answer is to resign. That, at least, is what Mrs. McBride did on Sunday following published reports that during the five years she had supposedly spent operating an etiquette school she was actually a sales-clerk in a gift shop. Mrs. McBride, whose resignation was announced by a mayoral spokesman, had been appointed to the newly created post of Directors of Protocol by Mayor Jane Bryne on Feb. 5. – New York Times, Feb. 17, 1981

Mayor’s Etiquette Aide Resigns the $35,000 Job, Amidst Officials’ Outrage 
CHICAGO (AP) Noreen McBride, who was hired two weeks ago to advise Chicago’s mayor on the proper etiquette for dealing with foreign dignitaries, has resigned her $35,000-a-year job, mayor Jane Byrne says. The resignation followed published reports that Mrs McBride 36, was fired last year from her job as a sales clerk because of tardiness and absenteeism. Mrs. Byrne, whose appointment of an “Etiquette Aide” drew fire from officials who considered the job a waste of money, said Sunday from Palm Springs, where she was vacationing, that Mrs. McBride had contacted her Chief of Staff and informed him she was quitting. In a telephone interview with the Chicago Sun-Times, the mayor said she had not spoken to Mrs. McBride personally about her resignation. Mrs. McBride, whose telephone has been disconnected, could not be reached for comment.

Mrs. McBride collected unemployment benefits for six months after she was fired from the $8,700-a-year clerk’s job, though she later said she was running an “etiquette school” from her home during that time, the Sun-Times reported Sunday. The owner of a gift shop and art gallery in suburban Oak Park, said Mrs. McBride was “a good employee” during the 11 years she worked at the shop, but “she seemed to lose interest in the job.” “She was constantly late for work,” he said. “I couldn’t tolerate it with the number of other employees I have.”
 
He also said that neither he nor any of his employees was aware Mrs. McBride was operating an etiquette school. The appointment, announced by Mrs. Byrne on Feb. 4, touched off a storm of controversy, in part because the mayor already had two $30,000-a-year aides handling protocol duties. The mayor who wants to build an international image for Chicago, said Mrs. McBride would advise city officials on planning dinners and other special events for foreign dignitaries. - Desert Sun, 1981


Etiquette Enthusiast, Maura J Graber, is the Site Editor for the Etiquipedia© Etiquette Encyclopedia