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Limited Vacation Issue

Kit Menkin’s Leasing News

www.leasingnews.org, Monday, September 22, 2003

Accurate, fair and unbiased news for the equipment Leasing Industry

 

October,2001 was our last “Salesman Pay Survey.” There certainly has been a change in the market place. Has the compensation changed in the last two years, please share with us.

If you would prefer us not to mention your company’s name, we will do, but it would give more credence to the survey with the name of your company and its sales compensation program.

 

Here is the 2001 Results:

 

Salesman Pay Survey

 

 

Today it appears the industry average for salesmen who work for companies that “discount” their leases (sell their lease contracts to others ) is approximately 50% of the profit. This is the present value of the lease contract, less funders discount charges. Many are paid a percentage of the override is fees charged, such as for documentation, site inspections, etc.

 

Some provide other expenses, such as health benefits, travel, but that is not common. A few will pay up to 60% over a “quota.”

 

One company did report paying 30%, but all expenses, health,

medical, and when the residual was received, 30% of the residual,

if the salesperson was still working for the company. ( This company

is no longer in business .) Another paid 45%, and when the quota was exceeded, 55%.

 

Volume was basically $10,000 to $20,000 in gross profits per

month ( less processing fees ), meaning the salesmen made anywhere from $60,000 to $120,000 a year, averaging $80,000 per year. As anywhere, 20% of the salesmen made in excess of $120,000 per year, always exceeding quota.

 

All were paid a draw against the commission in either by-monthly or

monthly installments with charge backs against quota not met; often

implied. Most were not given “house accounts”, but relied on their

production of signed leases.

 

The industry average for salesmen who work for companies who act as lessors, not selling or discounting their lease contracts, is more complex to state due to the various volume requirements for salesman. The main difference is “rate” versus “volume.” Lessor salesmen generally have accounts that the lessor services

and remuneration is not on the difference between the rate of the lease, but primarily on the volume of transactions.

 

Most salesmen here earn a base salary versus a draw. They are paid in excess of making their quota, or an additional percentage based on volume.

 

Where minimum volume was $6 million, .0075 to .008 was common,

or $45,000 per year. A report of .02 on volume over $200,000 was

stated, meaning the quota was $2.4 million a year in sales for the base

salary.

 

One salesman reported making $50,000. plus.0025% of volume. He was

hoping to make $100,000, meaning his goal was $20 million a year.

 

It appears the average lessor salesman must produce $10 million a year.

This figure, of course, is based on the market. Larger ticket or smaller

tickets have a different ratio. To sum up the remuneration schedule

to satisfy all requirements would take many, many more pages than

this report. Again, this report is from our readers.

 

It was also reported that transaction the lessor did not carry, probably for

credit reasons, were either brokered by the company, giving a split of

30% to 50%, or as the circumstance with many, some approved by the

company, such as practiced formerly by Sierra Cities, the salesmen could

send to another source and received the total commission. It was not

reported if this is common wide in the industry for lessors.

 

In the 1970’s, most leasing companies had salesmen who handled

“house” accounts, this changed in the 1980’s with the growth of

brokers who worked solely for a “commission.” The 1990’s saw

the growth of “super brokers,” who funneled other brokers transactions

for a commission. In addition, many funders were in essence super brokers, discounting transactions for the present value, often including the

residual in the discount or pledge of the contract.

 

 

 

Discount Response:

 

From your survey it appears that we may be giving the shop away. We

have a very simple commission only program. As a small to mid ticket

lessor broker/discounter we pay 50% of the gross fee on the

transaction. Higher amounts up to 60% are paid to consistent

producers, We pay every Friday for deals that fund that week. We

provide complete office and back room processing and pay for all internal

costs such as D&B, CBR, rent, phone, overnight etc.. Salesman pay for

all external costs such as entertainment and travel. We share in all

promotional and trade show expenses. We will work with established,

proven producers for a few months should a draw be necessary and we are

always interested in finding new talent.

 

 

Len Sperl, Onyx Capital Corp, Pittsburgh Pa. occ@sgi.net

 

+++\\

 

 

 

 

Here in Minneapolis at NFG our sales reps earn 50% of GP on all transactions. We provide office, phone, internet, marketing and trade show reimbursement. We have a credit, documentation and funding staff to handle most of the non-selling processes. In addition we do a draw on future commissions if a rep is new. Our monthly bonus plan is $240 over $7500 (which is the reps ½) and $600 over $10,000 . Quarterly bonus is $720 over $22,500 and $1800 over $30,000. If a rep hits $100,000 annually then the company provides a $600 per month car reimbursement for the entire next year. We feel we have an aggressive compensation package because we want all of our people to succeed. We are nothing without our people who got us here. Oh yeah we also have a condo in Vail available to all our staff and reps to use at no cost. We are currently attempting to create a way to pass ownership to super stars as well, but have not finalized it as of yet.

 

Will Abbott

President

Northland Financial Group, Inc.

Direct (952) 746-5251

888-485-5834

Fax (952) 979-1590

email wabbott@northland-financial.com

www.northland-financial.com

 

 

++++

 

We pay our sales reps 50% of the GP after inspections, UCC’s and routine

office costs. We also pay for marketing and promotion items, business

cards, brochures, handouts, mailings, etc, etc.

 

The reps responsibility is to bring in the business and that is it. I do not

require a monthly volume, but do ask that they stay in contact, preferably

in person, with any customer or vendor once a month at least. I price, doc,

close and fund the deals. All they do is make the contact.

 

Any deal originated or referred by that salesperson’s vendor or customer is

theirs even if they haven’t talked with them about the specific deal.

Average annual compensation is usually 50 to 65K, but the opportunity is

unlimited. We are presently looking for reps in northern New Jersey and

western NY and eastern PA.

 

888-583-0400

Bob Runyon,

Capital Agreements Corporation

capitallease@adelphia.net

 

 

+ + +

 

Here we make no salary, 45% of the gross margin on $1.00 residual deals, and 55% of the GM on the deals that we retain the FMV or 10% residual. We make 100% of the doc fee over what our sources charge and a draw is available on

a case by case basis.

 

 

++++

 

 

I pay my in-house sales people as follows: Base Salary of 30K per year.

this covers the first $5,000 in GP. I allocate 50% of any deal the generate

themselves and 10% of the GP on any house deal that I assign to them to help them cover the first $5,000 in GP. On the second 5,000 in GP the sales rep earns 25% and 40 % on any GP generated after that. A rep working for me can justify their existence at about $800K per year in volume. They will make $45-50K at $100K per month in volume and about $75K at $150K per month in

volume.

 

 

+++

 

We get 35% of the first $10,000 per month in gross that we bring into the

company. We get 45% above $10,000 and 50% above $18,000 per month. We split document fees over the amount required in the approval. It is all commission, no guarantee.

 

+++

 

W compensated salespeople with a 50% split of the

gross commission due on the leasing transaction. The salespeople generally had use of our office space, and we paid for special promotions. In addition, we provided an auto allowance of $300 per month, and a telephone allowance of $150 per month. We found it necessary, in virtually all cases, to provide the salespeople with a draw against future earned commissions. We found that even our most experienced salespeople did not break-even on this arrangement until they were employed with us at least three years.

 

The most generous compensation program I have first-hand knowledge of

provides the leasing salespeople with 65% of the gross transaction

commission. This company, a longtime, successful leasing broker, also

provides office space, use of telephone, and the payment of advertising

promotions.

 

In fairness to all leasing salespeople, their compensation potential depends

as much on their company’s access to capital, and flexible financing plans,

as it does on their individual sales ability and work ethic. In our case, at

just the time our salespeople began to realize their individual potential,

their ability to grow their earnings was drastically curtailed by our loss of

bank funding.

 

My only advice to your inquirer is: carefully evaluate the company you

represent or will represent. Your ability to cultivate vendor and lessee

relationships depends to a great degree on your company’s ability to deliver

on its credit program and funding promises. Unfortunately, in today’s

economic and leasing environment, the only thing you can count on is uncertainty.

Steve Chriest

schriest@aol.com

 

 

Lessor Salesmen

 

 

Working for a tech company, as the Leasing Manager in a captive scenario I find am in the a middle of the road in you compensation survey. I am paid a base salary of 45K, .0075 of volume on deals until I hit 50% of a 6MM quota. Over 50%, I am bumped to .1025 on volume. I also receive 33% of GP on fee income from transactions. Volume Commissions paid out monthly, and Fee commission paid out at the end of each quarter (the bonus incentive).

 

+++

 

I work for a leasing sub. of a large foreign bank. Mostly small ticket. Bases are in the 30’s-40’s depending on experience. We get .008 of volume with a kicker on spreads that exceed 50 over. Quotas are $6mm-10mm depending on territory.

 

 

++++

 

$50K base

.25% of volume

Cell phone paid for.

 

I should be making $100,000-

 

++++

 

As a sales rep, with 4 years experience I make a base salary of $48k with a chance to make commission once I make more money for the company than it takes to keep my seat, i.e. $4000 per month. It seemed to be online with the Advanta commission plan but unless you really generate volume you cannot realize commission.

 

++++

 

We pay 2% of equipment volume in compensation. Generally there is a base of $48K and the 2% commish is paid for volume over $200K. They also earn 25% of the fee of any brokered deal they bring in. The 25% split of broker income is independent of our funded equipment volume We pay monthly though will probably shift to quarterly.

 

+++

 

Around here, be it small ticket or big ticket, I believe all the lease

origination personnel have had a base salary and then a bonus once a certain minimum volume was done on a monthly (for the small ticket group) or annual (for the large ticket group) basis. Our most experienced and senior large ticket salesperson makes well into the 6 figure range I’ve heard but they consistently book volume in the tens of millions each year. I think all our large ticket group that have been here two or more years each make over $100,000 per year between base and bonus.

 

Our small ticket people have had the potential to make six figures but it

has always been heavily volume dependent.

 

There are several different bases, based on whether or not they hit their bogey for the year or month. Bonus is only paid once minimum target volume is reached. If someone is not hitting their target within a year around here they

usually let them go.

 

 

*** we are still open to collecting comments as we are relaying on

our readers for information and have no axe to grind. Comments may

be “on” or “off the record.” To those who have responded, we have

held your comments “off the record” as requested, or quoted you,

giving you the opportunity to plug you compensation plan. editor

 

 

 

 

Salesman Pay Survey

 

 

Today it appears the industry average for salesmen who work for companies that “discount” their leases ( sell their lease contracts to others ) is approximately 50% of the profit. This is the present value of the lease contract, less funders discount charges. Many are paid a percentage of the override is fees charged, such as for documentation, site inspections, etc.

 

Some provide other expenses, such as health benefits, travel, but that is not common. A few will pay up to 60% over a “quota.”

 

One company did report paying 30%, but all expenses, health,

medical, and when the residual was received, 30% of the residual,

if the salesperson was still working for the company. ( This company

is no longer in business .) Another paid 45%, and when the quota was exceeded, 55%.

 

Volume was basically $10,000 to $20,000 in gross profits per

month ( less processing fees ), meaning the salesmen made anywhere from $60,000 to $120,000 a year, averaging $80,000 per year. As anywhere, 20% of the salesmen made in excess of $120,000 per year, always exceeding quota.

 

All were paid a draw against the commission in either by-monthly or

monthly installments with charge backs against quota not met; often

implied. Most were not given “house accounts”, but relied on their

production of signed leases.

 

The industry average for salesmen who work for companies who act as lessors, not selling or discounting their lease contracts, is more complex to state due to the various volume requirements for salesman. The main difference is “rate” versus “volume.” Lessor salesmen generally have accounts that the lessor services and remuneration is not on the difference between the rate of the lease, but primarily on the volume of transactions.

 

Most salesmen here earn a base salary versus a draw. They are paid in excess of making their quota, or an additional percentage based on volume.

 

Where minimum volume was $6 million, .0075 to .008 was common,

or $45,000 per year. A report of .02 on volume over $200,000 was

stated, meaning the quota was $2.4 million a year in sales for the base

salary.

 

One salesman reported making $50,000. plus.0025% of volume. He was

hoping to make $100,000, meaning his goal was $20 million a year.

 

It appears the average lessor salesman must produce $10 million a year.

This figure, of course, is based on the market. Larger ticket or smaller

tickets have a different ratio. To sum up the remuneration schedule

to satisfy all requirements would take many, many more pages than

this report. Again, this report is from our readers.

 

It was also reported that transaction the lessor did not carry, probably for

credit reasons, were either brokered by the company, giving a split of

30% to 50%, or as the circumstance with many, some approved by the

company, such as practiced formerly by Sierra Cities, the salesmen could

send to another source and received the total commission. It was not

reported if this is common wide in the industry for lessors.

 

In the 1970’s, most leasing companies had salesmen who handled

“house” accounts, this changed in the 1980’s with the growth of

brokers who worked solely for a “commission.” The 1990’s saw

the growth of “super brokers,” who funneled other brokers transactions

for a commission. In addition, many funders were in essence super brokers,

discounting transactions for the present value, often including the

residual in the discount or pledge of the contract.

 

Discount Response:

 

From your survey it appears that we may be giving the shop away. We

have a very simple commission only program. As a small to mid ticket

lessor broker/discounter we pay 50% of the gross fee on the

transaction. Higher amounts up to 60% are paid to consistent

producers, We pay every Friday for deals that fund that week. We

provide complete office and back room processing and pay for all internal

costs such as D&B, CBR, rent, phone, overnight etc.. Salesman pay for

all external costs such as entertainment and travel. We share in all

promotional and trade show expenses. We will work with established,

proven producers for a few months should a draw be necessary and we are

always interested in finding new talent.

 

 

Len Sperl, Onyx Capital Corp, Pittsburgh Pa. occ@sgi.net

 

+++\\

 

 

 

 

Here in Minneapolis at NFG our sales reps earn 50% of GP on all transactions. We provide office, phone, internet, marketing and trade show reimbursement. We have a credit, documentation and funding staff to handle most of the non-selling processes. In addition we do a draw on future commissions if a rep is new. Our monthly bonus plan is $240 over $7500 (which is the reps ½) and $600 over $10,000 . Quarterly bonus is $720 over $22,500 and $1800 over $30,000. If a rep

hits $100,000 annually then the company provides a $600 per month car reimbursement for the entire next year. We feel we have an aggressive compensation package because we want all of our people to succeed. We are nothing without our people who got us here. Oh yeah we also have a condo in Vail available to all our staff and reps to use at no cost. We are currently attempting

to create a way to pass ownership to super stars as well, but have not finalized it as of yet.

 

Will Abbott

President

Northland Financial Group, Inc.

Direct (952) 746-5251

888-485-5834

Fax (952) 979-1590

email wabbott@northland-financial.com

www.northland-financial.com

 

 

++++

 

We pay our sales reps 50% of the GP after inspections, UCC’s and routine

office costs. We also pay for marketing and promotion items, business

cards, brochures, handouts, mailings, etc, etc.

 

The reps responsibility is to bring in the business and that is it. I do not

require a monthly volume, but do ask that they stay in contact, preferably

in person, with any customer or vendor once a month at least. I price, doc,

close and fund the deals. All they do is make the contact.

 

Any deal originated or referred by that salesperson’s vendor or customer is

theirs even if they haven’t talked with them about the specific deal.

Average annual compensation is usually 50 to 65K, but the opportunity is

unlimited. We are presently looking for reps in northern New Jersey and

western NY and eastern PA.

 

888-583-0400

Bob Runyon,

Capital Agreements Corporation

capitallease@adelphia.net

 

 

+ + +

 

Here we make no salary, 45% of the gross margin on $1.00 residual deals, and 55% of the GM on the deals that we retain the FMV or 10% residual. We make 100% of the doc fee over what our sources charge and a draw is available on a case by case basis.

 

 

++++

 

 

I pay my in-house sales people as follows: Base Salary of 30K per year.

this covers the first $5,000 in GP. I allocate 50% of any deal the generate

themselves and 10% of the GP on any house deal that I assign to them to help

them cover the first $5,000 in GP. On the second 5,000 in GP the sales rep

earns 25% and 40 % on any GP generated after that. A rep working for me can

justify their existence at about $800K per year in volume. They will make

$45-50K at $100K per month in volume and about $75K at $150K per month in

volume.

 

 

+++

 

We get 35% of the first $10,000 per month in gross that we bring into the

company. We get 45% above $10,000 and 50% above $18,000 per month. We split document fees over the amount required in the approval. It is

all commission, no guarantee.

 

+++

 

W compensated salespeople with a 50% split of the

gross commission due on the leasing transaction. The salespeople generally

had use of our office space, and we paid for special promotions. In

addition, we provided an auto allowance of $300 per month, and a telephone allowance of $150 per month. We found it necessary, in virtually all cases, to provide the salespeople with a draw against future earned commissions. We found that even our most experienced salespeople did not break-even on this arrangement until they were employed with us at least three years.

 

The most generous compensation program I have first-hand knowledge of

provides the leasing salespeople with 65% of the gross transaction

commission. This company, a longtime, successful leasing broker, also

provides office space, use of telephone, and the payment of advertising

promotions.

 

In fairness to all leasing salespeople, their compensation potential depends

as much on their company’s access to capital, and flexible financing plans,

as it does on their individual sales ability and work ethic. In our case, at

just the time our salespeople began to realize their individual potential,

their ability to grow their earnings was drastically curtailed by our loss of

bank funding.

 

My only advice to your inquirer is: carefully evaluate the company you

represent or will represent. Your ability to cultivate vendor and lessee

relationships depends to a great degree on your company’s ability to deliver

on its credit program and funding promises. Unfortunately, in today’s

economic and leasing environment, the only thing you can count on is uncertainty.

Steve Chriest

schriest@aol.com

 

 

Lessor Salesmen

 

 

Working for a tech company, as the Leasing Manager in a captive scenario I find am in the a middle of the road in you compensation survey. I am paid a base salary of 45K, .0075 of volume on deals until I hit 50% of a 6MM quota. Over 50%, I am bumped to .1025 on volume. I also receive 33% of GP on fee income from transactions. Volume Commissions paid out monthly, and Fee commission paid out at the end of each quarter (the bonus incentive).

 

+++

 

I work for a leasing sub. of a large foreign bank. Mostly small ticket. Bases are in the 30’s-40’s depending on experience. We get .008 of volume with a kicker on spreads that exceed 50 over. Quotas are $6mm-10mm depending on territory.

 

 

++++

 

$50K base

.25% of volume

Cell phone paid for.

 

I should be making $100,000-

 

++++

 

As a sales rep, with 4 years experience I make a base salary of $48k with a chance to make commission once I make more money for the company than it takes to keep my seat, i.e. $4000 per month. It seemed to be online with the Advanta commission plan but unless you really generate volume you cannot realize commission.

 

++++

 

We pay 2% of equipment volume in compensation. Generally there is a base of $48K and the 2% commish is paid for volume over $200K. They also earn 25% of the fee of any brokered deal they bring in. The 25% split of broker income is independent of our funded equipment volume We pay monthly though will probably shift to quarterly.

 

+++

 

Around here, be it small ticket or big ticket, I believe all the lease

origination personnel have had a base salary and then a bonus once a certain

minimum volume was done on a monthly (for the small ticket group) or annual

(for the large ticket group) basis. Our most experienced and senior large

ticket salesperson makes well into the 6 figure range I’ve heard but they

consistently book volume in the tens of millions each year. I think all our

large ticket group that have been here two or more years each make over

$100,000 per year between base and bonus.

 

Our small ticket people have had the potential to make six figures but it

has always been heavily volume dependent.

 

There are several different bases, based on whether or not they hit their bogey for the year or month. Bonus is only paid once minimum target volume is reached. If someone is not hitting their target within a year around here they usually let them go.

 

 

*** we are still open to collecting comments as we are relaying on

our readers for information and have no axe to grind. Comments may

be “on” or “off the record.” To those who have responded, we have

held your comments “off the record” as requested, or quoted you,

giving you the opportunity to plug you compensation plan. editor

 

 

 

 

 

 

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------------

This Day in American History

In the Northern Hemisphere, autumn begins today with the autumnal equinox, at 1:27 PM, EDT. Note that in the Southern Hemisphere today is the beginning of spring. Everywhere on Earth (except near the poles) the sun rises due east and sets due west and daylight length is nearly identical—about 12 hours, 8 minutes.

1777-Tacy’s Richardson’s Ride: Courageous 23-year-old Tacy Richardson (Jan 1, 1754-June 18, 1807) rode her favorite horse, “Fearnaught,” several perilous miles from the family farm at Montgomery County, PA to the James Vaux mansion to warn General George Washington of the approach of British troops led by General William Howe. As it turned out, the British crossing of the Schuylkill at Gordon’s Ford was a feint to deceive Washington who indeed hastily withdrew to Pottstown, clearing the way for General Howe to spend that night in the quarters Washington had occupied only a few hours earlier.

1776 – Captain Nathan Hale of Connecticut was executged by the

British in New York City for spying. Beofre he was hanged he said, “ I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country.”

http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/sep22.html

1789-The U.S. Created the Office of Postmaster General, following the Departments of State, War and Treasury.

1862-Emancipation Proclamation---One of the most important presidential proclamations of American history is that of Sept 22, 1862, in which Abraham Lincoln, by executive proclamation, freed the slaves in the rebelling states. “That on . . . [Jan 1, 1863] . . . all persons held as slaves within any state or designated part of a state, the people whereof shall then be in rebellion against the United States, shall be then, thenceforward, and forever, free. . . .” The “13th Amendment officially declared the abolition of slavery in all states.

( lower half of: http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/today/sep22.html )

1903- Italy Marchiony applied for his patent for his new mold which was filled with Ice Cream and is credited with inventing the Ice Cream Cone. He immigrated from Italy in the late 1800’s and went into business in New York City with a pushcart dispensing lemon ice. Success soon led to a small fleet of pushcarts, and the inventive Marchiony was inspired to develop a cone, first made of paper, later of pastry, to hold the ices and then vanilla and chocolate ice cream.

1927-Still talked about today as the “long count”, the world championship boxing match between Jack Dempsey and Gene tunney qat Soldier Field, Chicago, IL. It was the alrgest fight purse in the history of boxing at the time, nearly $1 million dollars. Nearly half the population of the US is believed to have listened to the radio broadcast of this fight. In the seventh round of the 10-round fith, Tunney was knocked down. Following the rules, Referee Dave Barry interrupted the count when Dempsey failed to go to the fartherest ocrner.The count was reusme dand Tunney got to his feet at the count of nine. Stopwatch reocrs of thos epresent claimed the total elapsed time from teh beginning of the ocunt until Tunney got to his feet at 12-15 seconds. Tunney, awarded sevenof the 10 rounds, won the fith and claimed the world champpionship. Dempsey’s appeal was denied and he never fght again. Tunney retired the following year after one more (successful) fight.

1937-n the Brunswick label, Red Norvo and his orchestra recorded the “Russian Lullaby”. Later Norvo would do a more famous work with a recording including singer Dinah Shore.

1955 - The film, “To Hell and Back,” starring World War II hero Audie Murphy, premiered in New York on this date.

1956---Top Hits

Canadian Sunset - Hugo Winterhalter & Eddie Heywood

Whatever Will Be Will Be (Que Sera Sera) - Doris Day

Be-Bop-a-Lula - Gene Vincent & His Blue Caps

Don’t Be Cruel/Hound Dog - Elvis Presley

1957-“Maverick” premiered on television. ( yes, my father Lawrence Menkin wrote several of these episodes as well as other Western television shows ).

This popular western, which has since been remade into a popular movie, starred James Garner as Bret Maverick, a clever man who preferred card playing to fighting. A second Maverick was introduced when production was behind schedule—Jack Kelly played his brother Bart. Garner and Kelly played most episodes separately, and when Garner left in 1961, Kelly was in almost all the episodes. Other performers included Roger Moore, Robert Colbert and Diane Brewster. This western distinguished itself by its light touch and parody of other westerns.

1964 - Robert Vaughn starred as Napoleon Solo when “The Man From U.N.C.L.E.” debuted on NBC-TV this night. Solo’s trusty side-kick in this James Bond spoof was Illya Kuryakin, played by David McCallum. The show was a hit for 3½ seasons.

1961-The first judge of a federal district court who was African-American was Judge James Benton Parsons, who was swon in at Chicago, Il, as U. S. district judge for the Northern District of Illinois.

1964---Top Hits

The House of the Rising Sun - The Animals

Bread and Butter - The Newbeats

Oh, Pretty Woman - Roy Orbison

I Guess I’m Crazy - Jim Reeves

1964 - The lights lowered, the curtain rose and Zero Mostel stepped into the spotlight as the fiddler played. “Tra-a—a-dition,” he sang, as he began the first of 3,242 performances and “Fiddler on the Roof” opened on Broadway at the Imperial Theater.. It became the first musical to run for more than 3,000 performances, based on stories by the Yiddish writer Sholem Aleichem ( pen name of Sholem Yakov Rabinowitz). Zero Mostel took the part of Tevye. It was presented by Harold Prince, with choreography of Jerome Robbins, music by Jerry Bock, lyrics by Sheldon Hamick and book by Joseph Stein.

1968- The Twins’ Cesar Tovar is the second major leaguer to play one inning at each position. In 1965, A’s Bert Campaneris became the first.

1972---Top Hits

Black & White - Three Dog Night

Baby Don’t Get Hooked on Me - Mac Davis

Saturday in the Park - Chicago

When the Snow is on the Roses - Sonny James

1973 - Henry Kissinger took the oath as U.S. Secretary of State. This was the first time a naturalized citizen had held this office. Only in America...

1976—“Charlie’s Angels” Premiere. This extremely popular show of the ‘70s featured three attractive women, usually scantily-dressed, solving crimes. Sabrina Duncan (Kate Jackson), Jill Munroe (Farrah Fawcett-Majors) and Kelly Garrett (Jaclyn Smith) signed on with detective agency Charles Townsend Associates. Their boss was never seen, only heard (the voice of John Forsythe); messages were communicated to the women by his associate John Bosley (David Doyle). During the course of the series, Cheryl Ladd replaced Fawcett, Shelley Hack and Tanya Roberts succeeded Kate Jackson.

1980---Top Hits

Upside Down - Diana Ross

All Out of Love - Air Supply

Another One Bites the Dust - Queen

Lookin’ for Love - Johnny Lee

1982—“Family Ties” premiers on TV. This popular 80s sitcom was set at Columbus, OH and focused on the Keaton family: Ex-hippies Elyse (Meredith Baxter-Birney), an architect, and Steven (Michael Gross), a station manager of the local public TV station; Alex (Michael J. Fox), their smart, conservative and financially-driven son; Mallory (Justine Bateman), their materialistic, ditzy daughter and Jennifer (Tina Yothers), their tomboy youngest daughter. Later in the series Elyse gave birth to Andrew. Marc Price played Irwin “Skippy” Handleman, the nerdy next-door neighbor who adored the Keatons, and Mallory in particular.

1985 - The poor of America’s Heartland ... the financially troubled farmers of Middle America ... got help from their friends in the music biz. Singing stars Willie Nelson, Neil Young and John Cougar Mellencamp held a benefit concert to raise funds. The stars came out and so did the money. The “Farm Aid” concert raised ten million dollars.

1988---Top Hits

Sweet Child o’ Mine - Guns N’ Roses

Simply Irresistible - Robert Palmer

Don’t Worry Be Happy - Bobby McFerrin

Joe Knows How to Live - Eddy Raven

1989 - Called by some critics “Body Watch”, the California-beach-based lifeguard show Baywatch debuted on NBC. Although the show had a healthy viewership, the network canceled the show after one season. Baywatch star, David Hasselhoff, took an unusual step, and investing a great deal of his own money, revived the show and offered it for syndication. He had researched the audience, and believed there was a loyal enough following to make his investment pay off. Hasselhoff proved to be right, and within a few years, Baywatch became the most-watched television show in the world, with huge audiences in England and China. It was estimated to have a collective viewership of 1 billion.

1993- The Rockies complete their inaugural season with a major league home attendance record of 4,483,350 fans.

1994-“Friends” premiered. This NBC comedy brought together six single friends and the issues in their personal lives, raning from their jobs to their love lives. Cast included Courteney Cox Arquette, Lisa Kudrok Jnneifer Aniston, Mathew Perry, David Schwimmer and Matt Le Blanc.

1997 - The Atlanta Braves won an unprecedented sixth straight division title. The record eclipsed the old mark of five straight set by the New Ycrk Yankees (1949-1953) and the Oakland A’s (1971-1975). The Braves failed to reach the World Series, however, for the first time since 1993.

1998 -The Blue Jays’ Jose Canseco hits his 45th and 46th home runs setting a new career high.

1998- With AL-leading HR #s 54 and 55, Mariner Ken Griffey Jr. joins Babe Ruth and Lou Gehrig as the only players to drive in 140 or more runs in three consecutive seasons.

2002 -In last game ever played at Cinergy Field, the Phillies complete a three- game sweep defeating the Reds ,4-3, in front of many of the team’s former superstars except for the banished Pete Rose. The all-time hit leader, however, is not forgotten as Tom Browning, paints Rose’s uniform number 14 on the pitcher’s mound after the game with red spray paint and, as home plate is dug up and to be delivered next door to Great American Ball Park, the crowd begins to chant, “Pete, Pete”.

 

 

 

from Mauna Kea, Hawaii

 

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