1896 - 1996

Photo from Houston Chronicle, page 1D, Jan. 18, 1996:
"100 Facts about Centenarian George Burns" by Andy Edelstein
of Newsday.
On January 20, 1896, Nathan Birnbaum was born destined
to become George Burns, one of this Nation's greatest comedic performers
and a centenarian. Why did he reach his destiny and others did not?
No one can say for sure. But he did have three good things going
for him: he had a great set of genes; a great sense of humor; and
a great capacity to never give up working, never give up loving,
and never say never. While many of us may not be as lucky as the
late Mr. Burns was in the "good genes" department, we
can, nevertheless, learn from him and develop a good sense of humor
and never say never. And while our lives might not be as long as
his, they can be as rich and rewarding.
Speaking of long lives, Mr. Burns, joined some 56,000
Americans 100+ years of age, the fastest growing age group in this
country. In 1980, when Willard Scott of NBC TV started recognizing
100th birthdays, there was just a trickle of letters weekly; now
he receives over 400 per week. Notwithstanding how remarkable becoming
100 years is and how many we have now, if demographers' projections
are anywhere near accurate, by the middle of the next century when
many of our children and grandchildren will be living, there may
be as many as 2.5 million centenarians! If that astounds you, say
"wow," because that is an astounding prospect to ponder:
Who will take care of them? Who will train their care givers? Why
are our national policies so uncertain regarding this issue facing
today's 33,000,000 older Americans and tomorrow's 76,000,000 aging
baby boomers?
Well, those are questions for another time. For
now we celebrate George Burns' 100th year of life and salute him
for all the good times he gave us. We also thank him for so ably
demonstrating how older people improve the quality of our lives.
On a note of levity that Mr. Burns would appreciate
is the story recounted by Gene Cohen, M.D., of George Washington
University, who told us recently that he had done a public service
TV spot with George Burns a year or so ago: When Dr. Cohen asked
the great comedian, holding his ever-present cigar, what his doctor
said about his smoking, Mr. Burns' retort was "my doctor is
dead!" Alas, in a physical sense, Mr. Burns is dead too, but
his contributions live on in our memories. What wonderful memories!