book1 unit7 after-class reading 2 The Night the President Met the Burglar

A cat burglar broke into the bedroom of the President of the Unites States, who confronted him, struck a deal with him and helped him escape.

The President and First Lady ---- she slept through the encounter ---- never told the Secret Service and he ordered a journalist friend not to print the story.

The journalist kept his word, and this is the first time the incident has been reported.

The event occurred in the early morning hours in one of the first days of the presidency of Calvin Coolidge, late in August, 1923. He and his family were living in a third-floor suite at the Willard Hotel in Washington. President Warren G. Harding's widow still was living in the White House.

Coolidge awoke to see an intruder go through his clothes, remove a wallet and unhook a watch chain.

Coolidge spoke: "I wish you wouldn't take that."

The intruder, gaining his voice, said: "Why?"

"I don't mean the watch and chain, only the charm. Take it near the window and read what is engraved on the back of it," the President said.

The burglar read: "Presented to Calvin Coolidge, Speaker of the House, by the Massachusetts General Court."

"Are you President Coolidge?" he asked.

The President answered, "Yes, and the Legislature gave me that watch charm ... I'm fond of it. It would do you no good. You want money. Let's talk this over."

Holding up the wallet, the intruder bargained: "I'll take this and leave everything else."

Coolidge, knowing there was $80 in the wallet, persuaded the intruder to sit down and talk. The young man said he and his college roommate had overspent during their vacation and did not have enough money to pay their hotel bill.

Coolidge added up the room rate and two train tickets back to the campus. Then he counted out $32 and said it was a loan.

He then told the intruder that there probably would be a Secret Service agent patrolling the hotel corridor, so the man left through the same window he had entered.

The President told his wife, Grace, about the event. Later, he told two friends, Judge Walter L. Stevens, the family lawyer, and Frank MacCarthy, a free-lance writer.

The President never told MacCarthy the intruder's name. As the 25th anniversary of the event approached, 15 years after Coolidge's death, MacCarthy, by then working for the Springfield Union, asked Mrs. Coolidge to let him use the story.

She declined, saying, "There is already too much publicity given to acts of violence."

MacCarthy honored her request, asking only that she review the story for accuracy and allow him to use it after her death.

Mrs. Coolidge died July 8, 1957, and MacCarthy died less than four months later without publishing his article.

MacCarthy had shared the story with me when we worked together. Because all reasons for keeping the secret have disappeared, this report has been reconstructed from MacCarthy's own article.

I have called the young man a burglar because MacCarthy's article so identifies him, but his notes show that Coolidge said the young man repaid the $32 loan in full.

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Calvin Coolidge
Frank MacCarthy
Grace
Massachusetts General Court
Legislature
Secret Service
Speaker of House
Springfield Union
Walter L. Stevens
Warren G. Harding
Washington
the White House
Willard Hotel

accuracy
anniversary
approach
bargain
burglar
charm
confront
corridor
court
decline
encounter
engrave
free-lance
incident
intruder
legislature
overspend
patrol
presidency
publicity
publish
rate
reconstruct
repay(repaid, repaid)
suite
unhook
union
violence
wallet
widow

add up
go through
honor someone's request
in full
keep one's word
strike a deal
talk ... over

猜你喜欢

转载自blog.csdn.net/sunshineman1986/article/details/79221442
今日推荐