) headed Caen's columns from 1976 until his death. Herbert Eugene Caen was born April 3, 1916, in
Sacramento, California, to a Jewish father and a non-Jewish mother, but he liked to point out that his parentspool hall operator Lucien Caen and Augusta (Gross) Caenhad spent the summer nine months previous at the
Panama Pacific International Exposition in San Francisco. After high school (where he wrote a column titled "Corridor Gossip") Caen covered sports for
The Sacramento Union; in later years he occasionally referred to himself as "the Sacamenna Kid". In 1936, Caen began writing a radio programming column for the
San Francisco Chronicle. When that column was discontinued in 1938, Caen proposed a daily column on the city itself; "It's News to Me" first appeared July 5. Excepting Caen's four years in the
United States Army Air Forces during World War II and a 19501958 stint at
The San Francisco Examiner, his column appeared every day except Saturday until 1990, when it dropped to five times per week and popularized
hippie during San Francisco's 1967
Summer of Love. He popularized obscureoften playfulterms such as
Frisbeetarianism, and ribbed nearby
Berkeley as
Berserkeley for its often-radical politics. Now and then an item (usually a joke or pun) was credited to a mysterious "Strange de Jim," whose first contribution ("Since I didn't believe in reincarnation in any of my other lives, why should I have to believe in it in this one?") appeared in 1972. Sometimes suspected to be a Caen alter ego, de Jim (whose letters bore no return address, and who met Caen only onceby chance) was revealed after Caen's death to be a
Castro District writer who, despite several coy interviews with the press, remains publicly anonymous. Caen took special pleasure in "seeing what he could sneak by his editorshis 'naughties, such as this item about a shopper looking for a
Barbie doll: Does Barbie
come with
Ken?' he asked the perky saleswoman. 'Actually no,' she answered slyly. 'Barbie comes with
G.I. Joeshe fakes it with Ken. On Sundays, current items were set aside in favor of "Mr. San Francisco's" A collection of essays,
Baghdad-by-the-Bay (a term he'd coined to reflect San Francisco's exotic multiculturalism) was published in 1949, and ''Don't Call It Frisco''after a local judge's 1918 rebuke to an out-of-town petitioner ("No one refers to San Francisco by that title except people from Los Angeles")appeared in 1953.
The Cable Car and the Dragon, a children's picture book, was published in 1972. In 1993, he told an interviewer that he declined to retire because "my name wouldn't be in the paper and I wouldn't know if I was dead or alive," adding that his obituary would be his last column: "It will trail off at the end, where I fall face down on the old
Royal with my nose on the 'I' key." == Honors and death ==