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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Zeritsky's Law, by Ann Griffith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Zeritsky's Law
-
-Author: Ann Griffith
-
-Release Date: February 16, 2016 [EBook #51234]
-
-Language: English
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-Character set encoding: ASCII
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ZERITSKY'S LAW ***
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-
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-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/cover.jpg" width="355" height="500" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-<h1>Zeritsky's Law</h1>
-
-<p>By ANN GRIFFITH</p>
-
-<p>Illustrated by THORNE</p>
-
-<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br />
-Galaxy Science Fiction November 1951.<br />
-Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br />
-the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="ph3"><i>Why bother building a time machine when there's<br />
-something much easier to find right in your own kitchen?</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>Somebody someday will make a study of the influence of animals on
-history. Although not as famous as Mrs. O'Leary's cow, Mrs. Graham's
-cat should certainly be included in any such study. It has now been
-definitely established that the experiences of this cat led to the
-idea of quick-frozen people, which, in turn, led to the passage of
-Zeritsky's Law.</p>
-
-<p>We must go back to the files of the Los Angeles newspapers for 1950
-to find the story. In brief, a Mrs. Fred C. Graham missed her pet
-cat on the same day that she put a good deal of food down in her
-home deep-freeze unit. She suspected no connection between the two
-events. The cat was not to be found until six days later, when its
-owner went to fetch something from the deep-freeze. Much as she loved
-her pet, we may imagine that she was more horror than grief-stricken
-at her discovery. She lifted the little ice-encased body out of the
-deep-freeze and set it on the floor. Then she managed to run as far as
-the next door neighbor's house before fainting.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Graham became hysterical after she was revived, and it was several
-hours before she could be quieted enough to persuade anybody that she
-hadn't made up the whole thing. She prevailed upon her neighbor to go
-back to the house with her. In front of the deep-freeze they found a
-small pool of water, and a wet cat, busily licking itself. The neighbor
-subsequently told reporters that the cat was concentrating its licking
-on one of its hind legs, where some ice still remained, so that she,
-for one, believed the story.</p>
-
-<p>A follow-up dispatch, published a week later, reported that the cat was
-unharmed by the adventure. Further, Mrs. Graham was quoted as saying
-that the cat had had a large meal just before its disappearance; that
-as soon after its rescue as it had dried itself off, it took a long
-nap, precisely as it always did after a meal; and that it was not
-hungry again until evening. It was clear from the accounts that the
-life processes had been stopped dead in their tracks, and had, after
-defrosting, resumed at exactly the point where they left off.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps it is unfair to put all the responsibility on one luckless
-cat. Had such a thing happened anywhere else in the country, it would
-have been talked about, believed by a few, disbelieved by most, and
-forgotten. But as the historic kick of Mrs. O'Leary's cow achieved
-significance because of the time and place that it was delivered,
-so the falling of Mrs. Graham's cat into the deep-freeze became
-significant because it occurred in Los Angeles. There, and probably
-only there, the event was anything but forgotten; the principles it
-revealed became the basis of a hugely successful business.</p>
-
-<p>How shall we regard the Zeritsky Brothers? As archvillains or pioneers?
-In support of the latter view, it must be admitted that the spirit
-of inquiry and the willingness to risk the unknown were indisputably
-theirs. However, their pioneering&mdash;if we agree to call it that&mdash;was,
-equally indisputably, bound up with the quest for a fast buck.</p>
-
-<p>Some of their first clients paid as high as $15,000 for the initial
-freezing, and the exorbitant rate of $1,000 per year as a storage
-charge. The Zeritsky Brothers owned and managed one of the largest
-quick-freezing plants in the world, and it was their claim that
-converting the freezing equipment and storage facilities to accommodate
-humans was extremely expensive, hence the high rates.</p>
-
-<p>When the early clients who paid these rates were defrosted years later,
-and found other clients receiving the same services for as little
-as $3,000, they threatened a row and the Zeritskys made substantial
-refunds. By that time they could easily afford it, and since any
-publicity about their enterprise was unwelcome to them, all refunds
-were made without a whimper. $3,000 became the standard rate, with $100
-per year the storage charge, and no charge for defrosting.</p>
-
-<p>The Zeritskys were businessmen, first and last. Anyone who had the fee
-could put himself away for whatever period of time he wished, and no
-questions asked. The ironclad rule that full payment must be made in
-advance was broken only once, as far as the records show.</p>
-
-<p>A certain young man had a very wealthy uncle, residing in Milwaukee,
-whose heir he was, but the uncle was not getting along in years fast
-enough. The young man, then 18 years old, did not wish to waste the
-"best years of his life" as a poor boy. He wanted the money while
-he was young, but his uncle was as healthy as he was wealthy. The
-Zeritskys were the obvious answer to his problem.</p>
-
-<p>The agreement between them has been preserved. They undertook to
-service the youth without advance payment. They further undertook to
-watch the Milwaukee papers until the demise of the uncle should be
-reported, whereupon they would defrost the boy. In exchange for this,
-the youth, thinking of course that money would be no object when he
-came out, agreed to pay double.</p>
-
-<p>The uncle lived 17 years longer, during which time he seems to have
-forgotten his nephew and to have become deeply interested in a mystic
-society, to which he left his entire fortune. The Zeritskys duly
-defrosted the boy, and whether they or he were the more disappointed
-is impossible to imagine. They never forgot the lesson, and never made
-another exception to their rule.</p>
-
-<p>He, poor fellow, spent the rest of his life, including the best
-years, paying off his debt which, at $3,000 plus 17 years at $100 per
-year, and the whole doubled, amounted to $9,400. The books record his
-slow but regular payments over the next 43 years, and indicate that
-he had only $250 left to pay when he died. We may, I think, assume
-that various underworld characters who were grateful ex-clients of
-the Zeritskys were instrumental in persuading the boy to keep up his
-payments.</p>
-
-<p>Criminals were the first to apply for quick-freezing, and formed the
-mainstay of the Zeritskys' business through the years. What more easy
-than to rob, hide the loot (except for that all-important advance
-payment), present yourself to the Zeritskys and remain in their
-admirable chambers for five or ten years, emerge to find the hue and
-cry long since died down and the crime forgotten, recover your haul and
-live out your life in luxury?</p>
-
-<p>Due to the shady character of most of their patrons, the Zeritskys kept
-all records by a system of numbers. Names never appeared on the books,
-and anonymity was guaranteed.</p>
-
-<p>Law enforcement agents, looking for fugitives from justice, found no
-way to break down this system, nor any law which they could interpret
-as making it illegal to quick-freeze. Perhaps the truth is that they
-did not search too diligently for a law that could be made to apply.
-As long as the Zeritskys kept things quiet and did not advertise or
-attract public attention, they could safely continue their bizarre
-business.</p>
-
-<p>City officials of Los Angeles, and particularly members of the police
-force, enjoyed a period of unparalleled prosperity. Lawyers and other
-experts who thought they were on the track of legal means by which to
-liquidate the Zeritsky empire found themselves suddenly able to buy a
-ranch or a yacht or both, and retire forever from the arduous task of
-earning a living.</p>
-
-<p>Even with a goodly part of the population of Los Angeles as permanent
-pensioners, the Zeritsky fortune grew to incredible proportions. By the
-time the Zeritsky Brothers died and left the business to their sons, it
-was a gold mine, and an inexhaustible one at that.</p>
-
-<p>During these later years, the enterprise began to attract a somewhat
-better class of people. Murderers and other criminals continued to
-furnish the bulk of the business, but as word of this amazing service
-seeped through the country, others began to see in it an easy way of
-solving their problems. They were encouraged, too, by the fact that
-the process was painless, and the firm completely reliable. There were
-no risks, no accidents, no fatalities. One could, in short, have
-confidence in the Zeritskys.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after Monahan's great exposure rocked the nation, however, many of
-these better-type clients leaped into print to tell their experiences.</p>
-
-<p>One of the most poignant stories came from the daughter of a Zeritsky
-client. Her father was still, at the age of one hundred and two,
-passionately interested in politics, but the chances of his lasting
-until the next election were not good. The daughter herself suggested
-the deep freeze, and he welcomed the idea. He decided on a twenty year
-stay because, in his own words, "If the Republicans can't get into the
-White House in twenty years, I give up." Upon his return, he found that
-his condition had not been fulfilled. His daughter described him as
-utterly baffled by the new world. He lived in it just a week before he
-left it, this time for good. She states his last words were, "How do
-you people stand it?"</p>
-
-<p>Some professional people patronized the Zeritskys, chiefly movie stars.
-After the expose, fan magazines were filled with accounts of how the
-stars had kept youthful. The more zealous ones had prolonged their
-screen lives for years by the simple expedient of storing themselves
-away between pictures. We may imagine the feelings of their public
-upon discovering that the seemingly eternal youth of their favorites
-was due to the Zeritskys and not, as they had been led to believe, to
-expensive creams, lotions, diet and exercise. There was a distinctly
-unfavorable reaction, and the letter columns of the fan magazines
-bristled with angry charges of cheating.</p>
-
-<p>But next to criminals, the majority of people who applied for
-quick-freezing seems to have been husbands or wives caught in
-insupportable marital situations. Their experiences were subsequently
-written up in the confession magazines. It was usually, the husband who
-fled to Los Angeles and incarcerated himself for an appropriate number
-of years, at the end of which time his unamiable spouse would have
-died or made other arrangements. If we can believe the magazines, this
-scheme worked out very well in most cases.</p>
-
-<p>There was, inevitably, one spiteful wife who divined her husband's
-intentions. By shrewd reasoning, she figured approximately the number
-of years he had chosen to be absent, and put herself away for a like
-period. In a TV dramatization rather pessimistically entitled <i>You
-Can't Get Away</i>, the husband described his sensations upon being
-defrosted after 15 years, only to find his wife waiting for him, right
-there in the reception room of the Zeritsky plant.</p>
-
-<p>"She was as perfectly preserved as I was," he said. "Every irritating
-habit that had made my life unbearable with her was absolutely intact."</p>
-
-<p>The sins of the fathers may be visited on the sons, but how often
-we see repeated the old familiar pattern of the sons destroying the
-lifework of the fathers! The Zeritsky Brothers were fanatically
-meticulous. They supervised every detail of their operations, and kept
-their records with an elaborate system of checks and doublechecks. They
-were shrewd enough to realize that complete dependability was essential
-to their business. A satisfied Zeritsky client was a silent client. One
-dissatisfied client would be enough to blow the business apart.</p>
-
-<p>The sons, in their greed, over-expanded to the point where they could
-not, even among the four of them, personally supervise each and every
-detail. A fatal mistake was bound to occur sooner or later. When it
-did, the victim broadcast his grievance to the world.</p>
-
-<p>The story appeared in a national magazine, every copy of which was sold
-an hour after it appeared on the stands. Under the title <i>They Put the
-Freeze on Me!</i> John A. Monahan told his tragic tale. At the age of 37,
-he had fallen desperately in love with a girl of 16. She was immature
-and frivolous and wanted to "play around" a little more before she
-settled down.</p>
-
-<p>"She told me," he wrote, "to come back in five years, and that started
-me thinking. In five years I'd be 42, and what would a girl of 21 want
-with a man twice as old as her?"</p>
-
-<p>John Monahan moved in circles where the work of the Zeritskys was
-well known. Not only did he see an opportunity of being still only 37
-when his darling reached 21, but he foresaw a painless way of passing
-the years which he must endure without her. Accordingly, he presented
-himself for the deep-freeze, paid his $3,000 and the $500 storage
-charge in advance, and left, he claimed, "written instructions to let
-me out in five years, so there'd be no mistakes."</p>
-
-<p>Nobody knows how the slip happened, but somehow John A. Monahan, or
-rather the number assigned to him, was entered on the books for 25
-years instead of five years. Upon being defrosted, and discovering
-that a quarter of a century had elapsed, his rage was awesome. Along
-with everything else, his love for his sweetheart had been perfectly
-preserved, but she had given up waiting for him and was a happy mother
-of two boys and six girls.</p>
-
-<p>Monahan's accusation that the Zeritskys had "ruined his life" may be
-taken with a grain of salt. He was still a young man, and the rumor
-that he received a hundred thousand for the magazine rights to his
-story was true.</p>
-
-<p>As most readers are aware, what has come to be known as "Zeritsky's
-Law" was passed by Congress and signed by the President three days
-after Monahan's story broke.</p>
-
-<p>Seventy-five years after Mrs. Graham's cat fell into the freezer,
-it became the law of the land that the mandatory penalty for anyone
-applying quick-freezing methods to any living thing, human or animal,
-was death. Also, all quick-frozen people were to be defrosted
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p>Los Angeles papers reported that beginning on the day Monahan's story
-appeared, men by the thousands poured into the city. They continued
-to come, choking every available means of transport, for the next two
-days&mdash;until, that is, Zeritsky's Law went through.</p>
-
-<p>When we consider the date, and remember that due to the gravity of the
-international situation, a bill had just been passed drafting all men
-from 16 to 60, we realize why Congress had to act.</p>
-
-<p>The Zeritskys, of course, were among the first to be taken. Because of
-their experience, they were put in charge of a military warehouse for
-dehydrated foods, and warned not to get any ideas for a new business.</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Zeritsky's Law, by Ann Griffith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Zeritsky's Law
-
-Author: Ann Griffith
-
-Release Date: February 16, 2016 [EBook #51234]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ZERITSKY'S LAW ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
-
- Zeritsky's Law
-
- By ANN GRIFFITH
-
- Illustrated by THORNE
-
- [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
- Galaxy Science Fiction November 1951.
- Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
- the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
-
-
-
-
- Why bother building a time machine when there's
- something much easier to find right in your own kitchen?
-
-
-Somebody someday will make a study of the influence of animals on
-history. Although not as famous as Mrs. O'Leary's cow, Mrs. Graham's
-cat should certainly be included in any such study. It has now been
-definitely established that the experiences of this cat led to the
-idea of quick-frozen people, which, in turn, led to the passage of
-Zeritsky's Law.
-
-We must go back to the files of the Los Angeles newspapers for 1950
-to find the story. In brief, a Mrs. Fred C. Graham missed her pet
-cat on the same day that she put a good deal of food down in her
-home deep-freeze unit. She suspected no connection between the two
-events. The cat was not to be found until six days later, when its
-owner went to fetch something from the deep-freeze. Much as she loved
-her pet, we may imagine that she was more horror than grief-stricken
-at her discovery. She lifted the little ice-encased body out of the
-deep-freeze and set it on the floor. Then she managed to run as far as
-the next door neighbor's house before fainting.
-
-Mrs. Graham became hysterical after she was revived, and it was several
-hours before she could be quieted enough to persuade anybody that she
-hadn't made up the whole thing. She prevailed upon her neighbor to go
-back to the house with her. In front of the deep-freeze they found a
-small pool of water, and a wet cat, busily licking itself. The neighbor
-subsequently told reporters that the cat was concentrating its licking
-on one of its hind legs, where some ice still remained, so that she,
-for one, believed the story.
-
-A follow-up dispatch, published a week later, reported that the cat was
-unharmed by the adventure. Further, Mrs. Graham was quoted as saying
-that the cat had had a large meal just before its disappearance; that
-as soon after its rescue as it had dried itself off, it took a long
-nap, precisely as it always did after a meal; and that it was not
-hungry again until evening. It was clear from the accounts that the
-life processes had been stopped dead in their tracks, and had, after
-defrosting, resumed at exactly the point where they left off.
-
-Perhaps it is unfair to put all the responsibility on one luckless
-cat. Had such a thing happened anywhere else in the country, it would
-have been talked about, believed by a few, disbelieved by most, and
-forgotten. But as the historic kick of Mrs. O'Leary's cow achieved
-significance because of the time and place that it was delivered,
-so the falling of Mrs. Graham's cat into the deep-freeze became
-significant because it occurred in Los Angeles. There, and probably
-only there, the event was anything but forgotten; the principles it
-revealed became the basis of a hugely successful business.
-
-How shall we regard the Zeritsky Brothers? As archvillains or pioneers?
-In support of the latter view, it must be admitted that the spirit
-of inquiry and the willingness to risk the unknown were indisputably
-theirs. However, their pioneering--if we agree to call it that--was,
-equally indisputably, bound up with the quest for a fast buck.
-
-Some of their first clients paid as high as $15,000 for the initial
-freezing, and the exorbitant rate of $1,000 per year as a storage
-charge. The Zeritsky Brothers owned and managed one of the largest
-quick-freezing plants in the world, and it was their claim that
-converting the freezing equipment and storage facilities to accommodate
-humans was extremely expensive, hence the high rates.
-
-When the early clients who paid these rates were defrosted years later,
-and found other clients receiving the same services for as little
-as $3,000, they threatened a row and the Zeritskys made substantial
-refunds. By that time they could easily afford it, and since any
-publicity about their enterprise was unwelcome to them, all refunds
-were made without a whimper. $3,000 became the standard rate, with $100
-per year the storage charge, and no charge for defrosting.
-
-The Zeritskys were businessmen, first and last. Anyone who had the fee
-could put himself away for whatever period of time he wished, and no
-questions asked. The ironclad rule that full payment must be made in
-advance was broken only once, as far as the records show.
-
-A certain young man had a very wealthy uncle, residing in Milwaukee,
-whose heir he was, but the uncle was not getting along in years fast
-enough. The young man, then 18 years old, did not wish to waste the
-"best years of his life" as a poor boy. He wanted the money while
-he was young, but his uncle was as healthy as he was wealthy. The
-Zeritskys were the obvious answer to his problem.
-
-The agreement between them has been preserved. They undertook to
-service the youth without advance payment. They further undertook to
-watch the Milwaukee papers until the demise of the uncle should be
-reported, whereupon they would defrost the boy. In exchange for this,
-the youth, thinking of course that money would be no object when he
-came out, agreed to pay double.
-
-The uncle lived 17 years longer, during which time he seems to have
-forgotten his nephew and to have become deeply interested in a mystic
-society, to which he left his entire fortune. The Zeritskys duly
-defrosted the boy, and whether they or he were the more disappointed
-is impossible to imagine. They never forgot the lesson, and never made
-another exception to their rule.
-
-He, poor fellow, spent the rest of his life, including the best
-years, paying off his debt which, at $3,000 plus 17 years at $100 per
-year, and the whole doubled, amounted to $9,400. The books record his
-slow but regular payments over the next 43 years, and indicate that
-he had only $250 left to pay when he died. We may, I think, assume
-that various underworld characters who were grateful ex-clients of
-the Zeritskys were instrumental in persuading the boy to keep up his
-payments.
-
-Criminals were the first to apply for quick-freezing, and formed the
-mainstay of the Zeritskys' business through the years. What more easy
-than to rob, hide the loot (except for that all-important advance
-payment), present yourself to the Zeritskys and remain in their
-admirable chambers for five or ten years, emerge to find the hue and
-cry long since died down and the crime forgotten, recover your haul and
-live out your life in luxury?
-
-Due to the shady character of most of their patrons, the Zeritskys kept
-all records by a system of numbers. Names never appeared on the books,
-and anonymity was guaranteed.
-
-Law enforcement agents, looking for fugitives from justice, found no
-way to break down this system, nor any law which they could interpret
-as making it illegal to quick-freeze. Perhaps the truth is that they
-did not search too diligently for a law that could be made to apply.
-As long as the Zeritskys kept things quiet and did not advertise or
-attract public attention, they could safely continue their bizarre
-business.
-
-City officials of Los Angeles, and particularly members of the police
-force, enjoyed a period of unparalleled prosperity. Lawyers and other
-experts who thought they were on the track of legal means by which to
-liquidate the Zeritsky empire found themselves suddenly able to buy a
-ranch or a yacht or both, and retire forever from the arduous task of
-earning a living.
-
-Even with a goodly part of the population of Los Angeles as permanent
-pensioners, the Zeritsky fortune grew to incredible proportions. By the
-time the Zeritsky Brothers died and left the business to their sons, it
-was a gold mine, and an inexhaustible one at that.
-
-During these later years, the enterprise began to attract a somewhat
-better class of people. Murderers and other criminals continued to
-furnish the bulk of the business, but as word of this amazing service
-seeped through the country, others began to see in it an easy way of
-solving their problems. They were encouraged, too, by the fact that
-the process was painless, and the firm completely reliable. There were
-no risks, no accidents, no fatalities. One could, in short, have
-confidence in the Zeritskys.
-
-Soon after Monahan's great exposure rocked the nation, however, many of
-these better-type clients leaped into print to tell their experiences.
-
-One of the most poignant stories came from the daughter of a Zeritsky
-client. Her father was still, at the age of one hundred and two,
-passionately interested in politics, but the chances of his lasting
-until the next election were not good. The daughter herself suggested
-the deep freeze, and he welcomed the idea. He decided on a twenty year
-stay because, in his own words, "If the Republicans can't get into the
-White House in twenty years, I give up." Upon his return, he found that
-his condition had not been fulfilled. His daughter described him as
-utterly baffled by the new world. He lived in it just a week before he
-left it, this time for good. She states his last words were, "How do
-you people stand it?"
-
-Some professional people patronized the Zeritskys, chiefly movie stars.
-After the expose, fan magazines were filled with accounts of how the
-stars had kept youthful. The more zealous ones had prolonged their
-screen lives for years by the simple expedient of storing themselves
-away between pictures. We may imagine the feelings of their public
-upon discovering that the seemingly eternal youth of their favorites
-was due to the Zeritskys and not, as they had been led to believe, to
-expensive creams, lotions, diet and exercise. There was a distinctly
-unfavorable reaction, and the letter columns of the fan magazines
-bristled with angry charges of cheating.
-
-But next to criminals, the majority of people who applied for
-quick-freezing seems to have been husbands or wives caught in
-insupportable marital situations. Their experiences were subsequently
-written up in the confession magazines. It was usually, the husband who
-fled to Los Angeles and incarcerated himself for an appropriate number
-of years, at the end of which time his unamiable spouse would have
-died or made other arrangements. If we can believe the magazines, this
-scheme worked out very well in most cases.
-
-There was, inevitably, one spiteful wife who divined her husband's
-intentions. By shrewd reasoning, she figured approximately the number
-of years he had chosen to be absent, and put herself away for a like
-period. In a TV dramatization rather pessimistically entitled _You
-Can't Get Away_, the husband described his sensations upon being
-defrosted after 15 years, only to find his wife waiting for him, right
-there in the reception room of the Zeritsky plant.
-
-"She was as perfectly preserved as I was," he said. "Every irritating
-habit that had made my life unbearable with her was absolutely intact."
-
-The sins of the fathers may be visited on the sons, but how often
-we see repeated the old familiar pattern of the sons destroying the
-lifework of the fathers! The Zeritsky Brothers were fanatically
-meticulous. They supervised every detail of their operations, and kept
-their records with an elaborate system of checks and doublechecks. They
-were shrewd enough to realize that complete dependability was essential
-to their business. A satisfied Zeritsky client was a silent client. One
-dissatisfied client would be enough to blow the business apart.
-
-The sons, in their greed, over-expanded to the point where they could
-not, even among the four of them, personally supervise each and every
-detail. A fatal mistake was bound to occur sooner or later. When it
-did, the victim broadcast his grievance to the world.
-
-The story appeared in a national magazine, every copy of which was sold
-an hour after it appeared on the stands. Under the title _They Put the
-Freeze on Me!_ John A. Monahan told his tragic tale. At the age of 37,
-he had fallen desperately in love with a girl of 16. She was immature
-and frivolous and wanted to "play around" a little more before she
-settled down.
-
-"She told me," he wrote, "to come back in five years, and that started
-me thinking. In five years I'd be 42, and what would a girl of 21 want
-with a man twice as old as her?"
-
-John Monahan moved in circles where the work of the Zeritskys was
-well known. Not only did he see an opportunity of being still only 37
-when his darling reached 21, but he foresaw a painless way of passing
-the years which he must endure without her. Accordingly, he presented
-himself for the deep-freeze, paid his $3,000 and the $500 storage
-charge in advance, and left, he claimed, "written instructions to let
-me out in five years, so there'd be no mistakes."
-
-Nobody knows how the slip happened, but somehow John A. Monahan, or
-rather the number assigned to him, was entered on the books for 25
-years instead of five years. Upon being defrosted, and discovering
-that a quarter of a century had elapsed, his rage was awesome. Along
-with everything else, his love for his sweetheart had been perfectly
-preserved, but she had given up waiting for him and was a happy mother
-of two boys and six girls.
-
-Monahan's accusation that the Zeritskys had "ruined his life" may be
-taken with a grain of salt. He was still a young man, and the rumor
-that he received a hundred thousand for the magazine rights to his
-story was true.
-
-As most readers are aware, what has come to be known as "Zeritsky's
-Law" was passed by Congress and signed by the President three days
-after Monahan's story broke.
-
-Seventy-five years after Mrs. Graham's cat fell into the freezer,
-it became the law of the land that the mandatory penalty for anyone
-applying quick-freezing methods to any living thing, human or animal,
-was death. Also, all quick-frozen people were to be defrosted
-immediately.
-
-Los Angeles papers reported that beginning on the day Monahan's story
-appeared, men by the thousands poured into the city. They continued
-to come, choking every available means of transport, for the next two
-days--until, that is, Zeritsky's Law went through.
-
-When we consider the date, and remember that due to the gravity of the
-international situation, a bill had just been passed drafting all men
-from 16 to 60, we realize why Congress had to act.
-
-The Zeritskys, of course, were among the first to be taken. Because of
-their experience, they were put in charge of a military warehouse for
-dehydrated foods, and warned not to get any ideas for a new business.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Zeritsky's Law, by Ann Griffith
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