Zenith

Zenith

Sunday, October 26, 2014

Post 17

Welcome to the new visitors!

For those unfamiliar with this weblog,  it tells the story of the triumphs and failures of Zenith Radio Corporation through the years, and how and why it finally failed, and fell into bankruptcy. This weblog will explain the circumstances that led to its fall, and tell the disturbing story of the role three administrations of the U.S. Government played in Zenith's fall.  The destruction was not only of Zenith, but the entire consumer products industry that produced radios and televisions, with the loss of 800,000 American jobs--and your job may  have been one of those  lost!

Sixteen "Posts" have been published so far. If you are curious about previous posts, you will be shown how to access them in the forthcoming  Post 18.  Also, you must be told that this weblog is being written by Ralph Clarke (although he has tried to suppress the fact, being naturally modest.  He . . . (OK, I!) . . . I worked for Zenith for nearly 40 years, and being a writer, I kept copious notes about what I observed.  I am also helped in the writing by you, the readers, for no single person can know it all.

                                                                      

Now that that has been "gotten off the chest," let's tell some history.

(Note:  the following story is what the author of this weblog learned second-hand, so some inaccuracies may have occurred.)

Zenith is famous for its “firsts --first in radio, first in television, first in hearing aids, etc.   Here is another first:  producing the richest patent attorney in history, one with a fortune thought to be $400 million, and with three private aircraft and a giant mansion, was a “product” of Zenith!
Perhaps some  of you remember Gerald Hosier. He worked as a Zenith engineer.  He wanted to be a patent lawyer.  And Zenith sponsored his education.  He succeeded!   He passed the law bar exam and the patent bar exam, both of which are extremely difficult.  But Hosier was brilliant, for he accomplished these feats while employed full time by Zenith.  It was said that Hosier  would dictate patent applications while driving to and from work—and patent applications are the most difficult form of writing, except perhaps for the drafting of treaties in International Law.   

Well, Jerry left Zenith for greener pastures, and  the pasture he found turned out to be incredibly green. He found another Jerry--an inventor named Jerome  “Jerry” Lemelson.  This Jerry was a bit eccentric, for he created  numerous  patents on filling pot-holes in streets.  Others of the  patents he submitted to the U.S. Patent Office were so obtuse and impossible to understand that he merited the  title of “Black Box Jerry” in the patent department—this opinion from some of the most astute technologists in American that work in the United States Patent and trademark Office.
                                                                         
Gerald Lemelson
                                                                           
However,  Jerry Lemelson  was also amazingly far-seeing, and an  inventor who has been compared to Edison. He has more than 600 patents to his credit—a rate of about one patent a week for 50 years.  Many of his patents disclosed  technologies of the future. In short, he was a “futurist.”  He conceived the concept of “machine-reading” and the bar code technology away ahead of its time, and wrote many patents on them.   An example of machine reading of bar codes is seen in a grocery store, where a bar-coded product  is passed over a reader in a platen, and the transaction is recorded to become your grocery bill.  In patenting  a concept far ahead of its time, and waiting until the technology has caught up and has appeared in products, Lemelson’s patents would be there, waiting!  Such patents were called “submarine patents” because they took so many by surprise. And it often was far less expensive to pay the royalties than to fight an infringement suit.   

Lemelson had set up a  foundation to hold his patent portfolio and to prosecute his claims of infringement. Then Gerald Hosier joined Gerald Lemelson and his foundation, and became a lead attorney.    Hosier  saw immense possibilities in Lemelson’s submarine patents.   The machine-reading technique  and coding applied to almost every aspect of the  manufacturing art.   Well,  the pair sued the big three auto manufacturers for infringement of the Lemelson patents, and won.  Won really big! Then other companies were sued and the Lemelson patents held by the Lemelson Foundation became a licensing gold mine, one yielding about $1.5 billion a year.

The payout was so good that the principals tried to keep the  Lemelson patents  in force  as long as possible. They were on questionable ground, for many of the patents  had expired or were about to expire.   Keeping the  patents alive was accomplished by  filing continuation applications  and amendments to the original patents. 

Cognex Corporation, which specializes in machine vision systems, had been fighting the Lemelson Foundation patents for five years, spending millions in doing so. It filed a suit in a U.S. District Court, which ruled that the  Lemelson Foundation's 14 patents relating to machine vision could not be enforced because the foundation "had waited too long to pursue the alleged violators." In a final crushing blow, the also  judge ruled that the Lemelson patents were invalid , and that the machine vision and bar code technologies protected by other patents did not infringe upon them.  The primary finding was based on a little known precept in patent law known as "laches"--lapse of time bars relief. In short, the Lemelson Foundation had waited too long. Hosier appealed to "SCOTUS"--the Supreme court of the United States, which declined to review the case. (Note well:  When the Supreme Court has denied a case, that is usually the "last chance" in law.  This fact applies to a later situation that,later on, affected Zenith profoundly, so please keep in mind.)

The licensing gold mine had run out of gold.

Hosier used his fortune as noted. Lemelson, however,  had set up the  charitable foundation described previously, and  made worthy use of his fortune. The mission of the foundation is as described in the Lemelson Foundation website . (Just click on the underscored words to view the website. A url (address) will  appear. click on it.)
The Lemelson Foundation uses the power of invention to improve lives, by inspiring and enabling the next generation of inventors and invention-based enterprises to promote economic growth in the US, and social and economic progress for the poor in developing countries. Established by prolific US inventor Jerome Lemelson and his wife Dorothy in the early 1990's, and led by the Lemelson family,  the Foundation to date has provided or committed to more than $185 million in grants and program-related Investments in support of its mission.

In fulfilling this worthy mission, the Lemelson Foundation  helps inventors worldwide to bring their inventions  to fruition by financial aid and help in patenting. And it awards a yearly prize of $50,000 to the inventor whose  achievement has contributed the most to humanity.
And so a good part of Lemelson's success is attributed to an ambitious engineer at Zenith who was able to fulfill his  dream  to become a patent attorney--with the help of Zenith. 
(Note:  Some of the foregoing content has been derived from an article by Bill Roberts published March 2004 in Electronic Business magazine.  The title of the article is Judge scuttles patent attacks.)

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Now!  Meet the Commander's granddaughter-- Bridget Brigitte McDonald!

                                                                               

Award-winning Composer, Writer, Women's and Sustainability Advocacy
Bridget Brigitte McDonald, Ph.D., is an award-winning composer, writer, and sustainability advocate who is currently Executive Director and President of theWomen's International Center and runs her own record label and online marketing company Bionic Sisters Productions. With a symphony-composer-grandmother and a radio-technology-pioneer-grandfather, she was destined for music, writing, and non-profit advocacy. With a world-renowned-author/educator mother and attorney father, it is no surprise that Bridget received a BA from UC Berkeley (Chinese History & Comparative Literature English/French/German) and MA (French) and Ph.D. (Comparative Humanities) from Johns Hopkins University. She has written 2 novels, a translation of French philosophy (Stanford), and has poems in journals across the country. She has taught at the University of OrlĂ©ans, France, and returned to California with her husband Jean-Pierre, a graphic and website designer, online marketing specialist, and manager who also has a diploma in gourmet cooking.

(For additional information about Bridget and her life and work, , open her website:   http://www.wic.org/bio/bbrigitte.htmBridget

Note by the Author of this blog:  Bridget often appears on Facebook as an advocate, for example, for the preservation of the African elephant and all African wildlife. Elephants need it:  it is said that 22,000 are killed yearly for their ivory tusks and as "jungle meat."

Commander McDonald would be proud of her! Let's evoke intimations of immortality and write "He is proud of her!"

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Wayne Bretl has retrieved the photos taken during the 10th and final  breakfast reunion!  Just click on the URL below (or copy and paste it into your internet address bar) and if you were at the reunion, you may find a photo of yourself, in all your glory! 
    
     http://www.flickr.com/photos/42002845@N02/sets/72157636029458105/

                                                                                


Thanks, Wayne! And farewell to those beautiful  breakfast meetings. They will remain long in memory 

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Hereis a photo of the entrance one of Zenith's finest facilties--the Rauland television picture tube plant  in Melrose Park, Illinois. It is  a horrible  picture (nothingelse was available!) because it is a copy of a photo printed in a newspaper, The Chicago Tribune. (Copies of newspaper photos printed as "dots" do not print well in printers which also use dots (pixels) for copying--you get the moire effect .  [That is sure a bad description of a printing process, but let it go because we have a very interesting subject to discuss--"Rauland," as it was called.]

The Rauland picture  tube plant was a wonder.  At present, there is a lack of photos of the plant, which, hopefully will be remedied by you, the readers. Also, there is a lack of written descriptions of the plant. To make up for the lack, let's reprint the Post 12 description of the ill-fated Lansdale plant--for they were very much alike.
                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                              
(Writer's note: for some strange rason, there is a big gap here which I can't close. When I try, and push "backspace,: the whole story disappears--completely gone--which, as you can imagine, leads to instant panic. --RC)  

Description of the Lansdale Television Picture Tube Plant

A facility for manufacturing picture tubes is a sheer marvel that encompasses all the arts of manufacturing.  The photos that follow give some idea of the scope and extent of the Lansdale (and the Rauland) picture tube plant.


The photo shows a line of pumps used for circulating the fluids required for the manufacture of television tubes. And there are many fluids: water, of course (deionized, too), acids, alkalis, hydrogen trioxide, etc.  And there are separate tanks for all of them, connected and interconnected by myriad pipes, conduits, conductors, valves, and unions--a wilderness of plumbing activated by myriad electrical controls and circuits.
                                                                                  
                                                                                   

Add to all the tools and equipment, hundreds of technicians and engineers, all highly skilled  and specialists in what they do to maintain and operate and the  factory.

                                                                                

--and of course, there are long assembly lines with the many attendants required as the tube travels a path from raw glass tube to its final testing stage, ready for sending to an assembly plant where it is fitted into a cabinet and becomes a salable product.

Looks pretty  expensive, doesn't it?  It was.  The cost was $65 million which, in today's money, is close to a third of a  billion dollar$.
                                                 --End of Lansdale Description--

Now let's talk about the Rauland Picture Tube Plant:  The total evaluation was much more than $65 million--more like $100 million because Zenith had expanded Rauland  to make all of its  picture tubes.  Employees totaled more than 2,000, and many of those had irreplaceable experience  in designing and manufacturing picture tubes. The demand was there, as Zenith was ramping up production to meet the production rate of television sets from Mexico. 

. . . production rate from Mexico? 

Yes, for all Zenith production of television sets was  relocated in Mexico.*  Why Mexico? Because Zenith had been forced to move all of its production of television sets out of the U.S. Why,  again?  Because of the grossly unfair competition from a criminal  RCA-Japanese  cartel.    Which leads to this sad headline--


 

  Yes, it had come to that!  And 2,000 employees of the Rauland were eventually let go, and the plant sold  All that experience was gone!  For the moving of production to Mexico, and other measures that Zenith had to take, had failed to halt the decline in Zenith' sales, for Zenith was soon to go bankrupt.   
But Rauland was the last to go.  When Zenith was forced to move "offshore" to Mexico, all American production employees were laid off, and the plants were sold.  Rauland was retained because it would have been impossible to transfer such a huge plant  to Mexico. 

Again, why did all this happen?  Because Zenith had lost the  Second War, the war with that criminal cartel.  The story of the Zenith's Second War will be told in a future Post of this weblog.  
                                         
[*Footnote:  . . .forced to move offshore to Mexico and Taiwan! But primarily to Mexico.]

(Sorry, Raulanders! . . . this is the first exposure to this weblog for many of you, and  unhappily, you are greeted by a sad story like this!)

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ERRATA (1)   In Post 10, Zenith's top-of -the -line Stratosphere 1000 was  listed erroneously as coming on the market in 1925.  It actually  appeared in 1938, and at the then-phenomenal  cost of $750. (That $750 in today's money is  $12,138!) Yet people bought them because it was a Zenith product, and Zenith was the best. If you had held onto that set, you could sell it today for $30,000 to $50,000, so it wouldn't have been a bad purchase.  (Let's line up and kick ourselves for not buying one and storing it away in Grandma's attic! And, thanks t0 Bill Cohn for spotting the error in the date.)  

ERRATA (2) In Post 15, it was written that Tom Argy had invented and patented the Zenith Space Phone.  In reality, Tom invented, not the space phone, but  a TV raster expansion system, one of his five patents.  (I lost the name of the former employee who told me of this error.. Thank you anyway, whoever you are!)
    Tom was a real nice guy, but he was outspoken, and often tangled with higher ups.  One morning I found him fuming:  his office had been relocated overnight next to the loading dock!  I know who he tangled with, but I won't tell.
There will be more "errata," in this weblog, for sure. If you catch an error, please let me know.  (RC)
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Zenith seems to be immortal!
Not the company itself, sad to say, but its products--its radios, for example.  Especially the TransOceanic, of which working models today are hot items.  Go to eBay, for example:  www.ebay.com , and enter the search term  Transoceanic.


The beauty pictured is the Zenith Solid State TransOceanic Royal 7000-1 short Wave 11 Band radio. You can buy it for $269.95 (or join the bidding on Ebay and perhaps get it for a lower price). 
If you can't manage the price, try for this one--another  from eBay.
To view all the sellers of TransOceanics,, and there are a great many, go to  Google Search and enter Trans-Oceanic.  This step will produce  217,000 "hits."

The Trans-Oceanic was perhaps the most popular radio of all time. It was a special love  of Commander McDonald, who supervised its design to the end of his life.

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And here is a request for a donation for a worthy cause, from Jimmy Wales, founder of Wikipedia--


     Wikipedia is the #5 site on the web and serves 500 million different people every month – with billions of page views.
     Commerce is fine. Advertising is not evil. But it doesn't belong here. Not in Wikipedia.
     Wikipedia is something special. It is like a library or a public park. It is like a temple for the mind. It is a place we can all go to think, to learn, to share our knowledge with others.

     When I founded Wikipedia, I could have made it into a for-profit company with advertising banners, but I decided to do something different. We’ve worked hard over the years to keep it lean and tight. We fulfill our mission efficiently.
      If everyone reading this donated, our fundraiser would be done within an hour. But not everyone can or will donate. And that's fine. Each year just enough people decide to give.

     This year, please consider making a donation of $5, $20, $50 or whatever you can to protect and sustain Wikipedia.

Thanks,
Jimmy Wales
Wikipedia Founder


To donate, go to any Wikipedia site. For example,   http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trans-Oceanic  In  the column on  the left side, you will seen an entry DONATE. Just click on it and the instructions for donating will appear.  Even $5 or $10 will help.  (No,  I don't get a "cut.")
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Who is this engineer and what is he holding?  He is Zenith electrical engineer Alfred Ditthardt (better known as "Al" Ditthardt!)  and he is holding the Zenith Pocket Pager.  With a group of his fellow engineers, who will be named, the group developed a pager and paging system that the Morotorola engineering staff said "was impossible."  Just like Zenith engineers to do that!  The whole inspiring story will be told in a later post, when the writer has had the time to do  the story justice.
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Just in!  Hold the Presses!
                                                                          
Russell Miller
 
Below  is a copy of an  email message just received from a former Zenith-ite, Russell Miller!  It is amazing what experience with Zenith can lead to, and  Russ is an example. Russ was Senior Vice President of  Zenith, and head of  a "giant" International Marketing Department at Zenith consisting of himself of two other people.  Like all Zenith-ites,  he eventually got the axe, and  I told him it was because "he was over-staffed." (Let's of laughs followed, followed by a quick escape for the writer.)

Hi Ralph,

 

You had asked me to let you know when my next book becomes available. It is now at  www.amazon.com/books  in both print and kindle format. The title is "Death of a Spymaster" and the fictional central character is a retired international marketing executive, with ties to the CIA,  who worked for a consumer products company named Apex Electronics. The narrative is quite contemporary since it is centered, for a  large part, in Ukraine at the start of their problem  with Putin's Russia.

 

This is my sixth book since leaving Zenith, and my third spy novel. The publisher's promotional sheet is attached (I hope) describing the book in more detail There are some incidents involved (such as dealings  with the licensee in Israel)  that may be familiar to some of the Zenith people; and I think that everyone will find it to be an interesting as well as an entertaining read.

 

If you need any more information or have any questions about the book please contact me, and good luck on your blog.

-- Russ Miller
Books by Russ are a good read, really gripping, and without the sex-soaked action you will find in other spy novels. In his years with Zenith, Russ traveled to more than 100 different companies, which gave him the worldwide experience that led him to be a writer of spy novels.   

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In the next post, Post 18,  of this Zenith weblog, we'll complete Al Ditthardt's story of the Zenith pager; also, and for the benefit of newcomers, we'll offer a recap of what's been published in past Posts of this Zenith weblog , along with instructions how to easily access any post you may wish to read.  

An apology:  I have an awful time with hyperlinks--those Url's and other indicators which are supposed to take you to other websites. Google seems to be fighting me when I use its system for inserting hyperlinks. So please do the best you can in accessing the other sites; they're worth visiting. You may have to copy and paste the address into your internet address bar. 

SO!--Mizpah! until next time.

An  explanation of the word "Mizpah" for those who have recently joined:  It is a Hebrew term which means (very roughly)  ". . .  may all be well with you and I until  we meet again  "Mizpah"  was also the name of McDonald's yacht.


 

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

Post 16

First, let's welcome the Raulanders to the readership of the Zenith Book Weblog.
The Raulanders are a group of former employees (Hey!--we're all "former" employees, for there are none left of the employees of the original Zenith. Let's try that again--) 
 
 The Raulanders are a group of those who were employed by the Rauland Corporation--the television picture tube manufacturing plant located in Melrose Park, Illinois. The plant is pictured in the photo farther down on these pages as "Rauland Plant 1."  The Raulanders get together  to  fraternize at occasional meetings and to maintain old friendships.  
    Welcome once again to the Raulanders!  

Now, here follows  the Second Installment of Zenith's First War, the war that Zenith won for its own survival,  and for the survival of all the America's television manufacturers-- and  for the continued employment of 800,000 American workers.
(Note:  If you want to freshen your memory as to what's in the First Installment, or, if you are a late-comer to the weblog, just scroll down these Post 16 pages to Post 15,which immediately follows this Post 16, and read the first installment there. )

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At the close of the First Installment of the First War, we left Zenith lawyers Phil Curtis and Frank Crotty in that "fleabag" room in New York City, sorting through the useless documents  that RCA had provided to obfuscate Zenith's search for documents needed to prove its case against the RCA patent cartel.  Now, the affair began to turn in favor of Zenith.

Zenith's lawyers  reported the matter to Chicago's Judge Michel Igoe, who immediately order RCA's lawyers to produce the needed documents that proved the existence of the RCA patent cartel.

 Europe was another consideration.  The patent pools of European co-conspirators were counterparts to the RCA patent pool in the United States.  It was thought that English, French, Dutch, German and Scandinavian patent pools had files on the overall conspiracy.  Zenith requested that letters rogatory (A letter rogatory, “or letter of request,”  is a formal request from a court to a foreign court for some type of judicial assistance. --Wikipedia) be issued to the appropriate courts in the countries cited so that Zenith could pursue its pretrial discoveries in Europe; in short, to enable Zenith to examine the participants and the documents relating to the patent pools of the conspirators.
  

   Judge Igoe issued the order to the High Court of Justice in London and the appropriate courts in the countries cited.  To proceed before the High Court in London, Zenith attorneys had to hire a British solicitor and a British barrister to present its case.  Wright, McConnell, and Curtis arrived in London to find that, before they even started, their efforts had been violently opposed in the High Court by the RCA patent cartel and the English companies which were members of the cartel.
 

The trial was called, and the Zenith lawyers went to attend the court, probably at the Old Bailey in London.   Curtis's initial reaction:  “When the judges assembled in their wigs and robes and were seated, we could look up at them, it seemed, as if we were in an orchestra pit staring up at a stage high above us where a collection of impressively robed and white-wigged, seemingly supernatural jurists sat in divine judgment on our cause.”
 

Curtis Describes the High Court Proceedings
 Zenith’s British barrister briefly presented its case, and the impressive and eminent barrister for the opposition, Sir Hartley Shawcross, rose and presented the RCA-GE case.  He declared that British companies were being attached by a “Chicago company” and their “Chicago lawyers,” and declared that the pretrial discovery process was entirely foreign to the British system of justice.  Curtis noted that Capone wasn’t mentioned, but it wasn’t necessary to make his point, and observed:
     “As I looked up at the judges, their faces wrinkled by years of judicial service, they appeared to be pained and horrified by the revelations of our opponent’s barrister.  With saddened eyes, the judges seemed to be staring down at us as if we were Chicago gangsters boldly intent on attacking the cream of Britain’s peerage in the very capitol of the Empire.  Tom McConnell facetiously whispered to Wright and me, ‘We’ll be lucky if we escape from here without being put in a dungeon at the Tower in chains’.”
     But if recourse to British justice had failed, RCA executives in London were still subject to the authority of the Chicago court under Judge Igoe.  RCA’s European representative, Cornelius Mayer, was summoned for examination conducted by Tom McConnell.  The result was 244 pages of “arrogant, evasive testimony’; in other words, RCA’s minion was stonewalling.  McConnell suspended the deposition until Mayer’s files could be examined.
     But Mayer had transferred his records from RCA offices in London to a newly formed subsidiary in Switzerland where RCA thought that under Swiss law as in British law, the records would be immune from examination.  The flagrant attempt to hid the Mayer files was brought before Judge Igoe, who ruled that the files must be returned to London forthwith.  After a clumsy attempt by RCA to withhold the files and to conceal those harmful to RCA’s case, Zenith attorneys were able to examine them.  What the found was evidence of a patent pool in gross violation of U.S. antitrust laws.
     Mayer was again examined.  This time he was faced with the actual documents which clearly showed RCA’s involvement in the attempt to bar Zenith from the European market.  Further evidence was obtained that showed the cartel had blocked Zenith’s efforts to export to Norway, Denmark and Sweden as well as the entire European continent. [Tom McConnell’s examination of Mayer is set forth in Appendix III of the Curtis book, and it is where “Bulldog” McConnell really showed his teeth.]
     Alarmed by Zenith’s progress in discovery, RCA tried to get Judge Igoe removed from the case on the basis that he had displayed “personal bias and prejudice” toward the defendants.  The obvious intent was to get another judge who would rule in favor of RCA – in short, another Judge Leahy.  Judge Igoe refused, and the federal appeals court supported the refusal.  So desperate was the RCA cartel to avoid the antitrust charges that it even appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, which denied the appeal.
     [Note:  RCA’s attempt to replace a judge that is providing unfavorable rulings is a classic tactic in court practice. Zenith’s case was saved when Judge Igoe refused to step down.  But Zenith was not so fortunate in the Zenith Second War, as we shall see.]

Zenith Wins!
     The Zenith case against RCA and the cartel was scheduled for trial in September of 1957.  RCA however avoided trial by agreeing to settle out of court, paying Zenith $10 million in damages; also, Zenith was awarded a worldwide, five-year, royalty-free license under all the patents in the cartel’s pool. (Note that RCA avoided trial because it didn't want to have its "dirty linen" washed in  public, where it would have adversely affected its product sales.)
     However, Zenith  intended to hold RCA’s feet to the fire by insisting that the courts address the antitrust issue.  A New York federal grand jury indicted RCA for criminal violation of the Sherman Antitrust Act.  Slippery as ever, RCA avoided a criminal trial by not contesting the case.  A fine of $100,000 was imposed – the tiniest slap on the wrist considering the hundreds of millions of dollars the RCA cartel had reaped in the 30 years it had imposed its criminal cartel, and the American companies it had destroyed. The fine  should have been more like $10 million or even a $100 million.
 ---and by that decision, Zenith and all American television and electronics-related  companies were freed from the grasp of the criminal cartel, and would no longer have to pay the crippling royalties. 

    In closing, Curtis noted that “we were grateful that the government did not fight us on behalf of the conspirators.”  That statement proved to be a self-fulfilling prophecy for--as incredible as it may seem--the U.S. government did just that in the second war, a war in which Zenith and hundreds and thousands of American workers were the tragic losers.
  


    So the First War ended in a triumph for Zenith. But that triumph was short-lived, for a more formidable cartel had been formed--the RCA-Japanese cartel.  The story of the Second War will be told in three forthcoming Posts comprising three installments.

(McDonald's daughter, Marianne, wrote that if you mentioned David Sarnoff's name to her father, you would get instant anger. And it is said that the name "Zenith" was was never allowed to be heard  in the offices of RCA.)
   
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A Tribute!  A tribute to Michael Lambert Igoe! He was a federal judge to the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois. He served as a federal judge from 1939 to 1965.   He ensured that Zenith got justice in its suit against RCA.  

Two questions:   If I may venture to ask:  How many of you wonderful readers knew the story of the Zenith's two wars?  How many of you have read the Curtis book?  
    Commenting as an author:  If it turns out that only a few of you knew about the Curtis book and its contents, it is an incentive for The Author to write a "popular" edition of the book, for it is a story that should be told for its implications both then and now--especially now in view of the fact that the U.S. government  seems to get ever more powerful, and hence more dangerous to our civil liberties. What it did to Zenith with regard to the Second War  is  inexcusable, and the crime should be revealed to posterity by means of a special  book written for that purpose. 

Comments, anyone?
 

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Now--about Zenith's Second War, the war which is yet to be told.  It is the war Zenith lost--a loss that was  not only Zenith's, but a loss  by the entire American consumer products industry by another criminal cartel.  And that loss includes radio and television companies such as Admiral, Sylvania,  Philco, Magnavox, and several others, which were driven  out of business by another  criminal cartel,  or were taken  over by a foreign company.    And jobs were lost!--about  800,000 American  jobs were lost to America. 

Chicago was  hit particularly hard:  Zenith had five big factories in Chicago that employed thousands of Chicagoans, mostly from the West Side.

Other Zenith plants not shown are  the  plants in Glenview, Illinois , the Wincharger plant in Sioux City, Iowa, and Zenith Radio Research Corporation in Canada.  And there were many others scattered though-out the country.  (Thanks to Robert Reichle for providing these images!)

The Plants are all gone, now. The properties are still there, of course,  but no longer owned by Zenith, for there is no Zenith anymore. 

What happened to Zenith, which has such a huge presence in the Chicago and the United States?

It is all the result of the loss of Zenith's Second War! 

But let's not tell the story of that Second War at this point in time.  It is a very controversial story, and I fear that it is so controversial that this blog will be attacked.  Attacked?  Yes! Shut down! Internet sites like this weblog are actually very vulnerable, and they can be wiped out, as those of you knowledgeable of the internet will know. Who would shut it down?--one of those described (and not named here) in connection with  Zenith's struggle to survive.

So, until a later time, let's hold off on telling about the Second War, and have the pleasure of telling about  many good years of Zenith.

An early Zenith logo
 
 Now for something completely different.  This is really different!  John Taylor, VP of public relations of LG Corporation (and the P.R .V.P.  for the original Zenith), received a letter from a Marco van Beek, with a request for information about his uncle, Pieter van Beek--a hero of the resistance in the last world war.  Pieter van Beek once worked for Zenith  and Marco wants to know what he did at Zenith.  Here is  an excerpt from  that letter--

Dear Mr Clarke,

Your contact details were passed on to me by John Taylor at Zenith. I have been researching the life of my uncle, Pieter van Beek, as a result of recently finding a half-written autobiographic account of his time during the second world war. I didn't really know him while he was alive. I spoke to him once on the phone, and we exchanged letters once or twice a year, since I was brought up in England and Spain.

I was wondering if you might be able to shed any light on his professional life at Zenith and Teco, Inc. From what I have been able to find on the Internet, he was heavily involved in setting up Pay TV, and John Taylor's response would lead me to believe he was a very influential person.

Any information you may have would be appreciated. In case it is of interest to you, Uncle Pieter was very involved in the Dutch underground resistance, initially helping downed aircrew, including American crew, as part of what was called the underground railway. It looks like his group were responsible for getting crews out of Holland and into France, from where they then passed to Switzerland or Portugal via Spain. One of those weird rules of war state that if you evade capture, a neutral country can repatriate you, but if you were an escapee, you had to be interned.

When the Gestapo identified him and his twin brother (although they did not realise there were two of them, apparently), they both escaped separately to Paris, where, by complete coincidence, they met going into the same bomb shelter nine months later. Pieter then became active in a Maquis group that was hindering the building of the Atlantic Wall. It appears that the group was uncovered, but Pieter managed to get to England. By now it was mid 1943, and I assume he came to the notice of the SOE, who trained him to be parachuted behind enemy lines in advance of the invasion, probably as part of the teams called "Jedburgs". The records are a little sketchy at this point, probably to protect those who still had family in occupied Europe. By early 1944 he had been sent out to Asia, presumably because the Gestapo had completely compromised the Dutch SOE operation by this point.

A couple of days after the Japanese surrender he commanded one of 48 (or possibly 52) RAPWI (Repatriation of Allied Prisoners of War and Internees) teams parachuted in to Sumatra and Indonesia. After a 12 hour trip in a stripped out Liberator bomber he and 3 others parachuted into Pedang, where for the next 6 weeks he was responsible for the well-being of around 9000 POW and civilian internees. Accounts from one of the other teams indicates that each RAPWI team probably saved 1000 lives.

One of the first civilians he met when the arrived at the main town was a female American war correspondent called Emilia Wilson, who had been captured in Singapore. That person became his wife, and that's why he came to live in the States.

Anyway, anything you might be able to tell me about him would be gratefully received.

Regards,

Marco van Beek.

 
It is believed that Pieter van Beek worked in Zenith’s  Phonevision Group.  He may have been one of the Dutch engineers recruited by Bob Adler.  If you recall Pieter and what he did for Zenith, please forward your information  to the author of this weblog at the email address  ducord@gmail.com The  information will be sent to John Taylor for retransmission to Marco van Beek.
But--what a thrilling story!  Zenith employee Pieter van Beek was obviously a hero of the resistance in the war in Europe, and later, a hero in the war in the Far East--the war with Japan. Many of those whom van Beek  rescued  in the Far East were newly-freed American prisoners of the Japanese.  They were probably in a bad way because the Japanese did not follow the Geneva Convention for fair  treatment of prisoners. For example, do you recall the Death March of Bataan, in which American GI's captured in the Philippines by the Japanese were forced to march  175 miles from the coast to distant CampDouglas, and  march without food or water?  Those who fell out from exhaustion and lack of food and water were shot. And those who were compelled by ravaging thirst to drink  from the stagnant water that bordered the road, died of dysentery. But that is another story.

And there is a another war-related story, one involving a Zenith employee, Helmut Cermak.  Cermak  is pictured on the cover page of the first edition of ServiceWorld magazine. (Note: ServiceWorld magazine is described in Post 3.)

Here is Helmut playing the role of a Zenith television serviceman on the cover of ServiceWorld magazine. Note the truck in the background decorated with Zenith insignia and the Zenith name.  It was borrowed from a Zenith distributor for this photograph. (One of my better photos, by the way) --
                                                                                      
 Helmut Cermak was  originally a citizen of CzechoSlovakia, which at that time was an "Iron Curtain" county.  Russia had denied Iron Curtain country citizens  escape from  their countries. Cermak, along with  other Czechs,  was riding in an airplane to a city within CzechoSlovakia, and  escaped from the country by hijacking the airplane and flying it to freedom to country outside the Iron Curtain--the first hijacker in history to do so! So Zenith could boast of having had the very first airplane hijacker in its employment!


And that is the end of Post 16. 

Now for a correction, please.  These postings have been called blog.  That name sounds like a deposit left  by a naughty dog--"Fido left a blog on the floor." The term blog is  a corruption  of weblog-- a log carried by the web, or internet The term log by itself is a kind of a record, like a "ships log,"--a record of its voyages.  So let's cast aside "blog" and call the Zenith Book "weblog"  from now on.

 
     And below is how Google  indicates  a problem.  This little fellow is often a visitor to these web pages.

MIZPAH!
--Ralph Clarke