Transcript for the Piece Audio version of StoryCorps 9/11: Arlene Sullivan and Norene Schneider
Arlene Sullivan: He was always very smart, very bright boy. When he was
five, we went into a candy store one day and the man had a sign:
'Pretzels - 2 cents each or 2 for 5 cents.' And he said to the man,
'That sign's not right, mister.' He said, 'It's 2 cents each or 3 for 5
cents.' So the man said, 'My sign's not wrong.' And Tommy said, 'Well
then I want one for 2 cents and another one for 2 cents.' He didn't
wanna give him that extra penny. So maybe--maybe he was cut out for
finance even at that age.
Norene Schneider: Yeah I think Daddy probably said, 'Yeah, my boy's
going to Wall Street.'
AS: But I think the big thing was with Tommy was his first summer job
when he was 13. Dad worked for the first discount brokerage house, and
the broker said 'We need somebody to come take lunch orders for us.' And
that person turned out to be Tommy. And the brokers used to say, 'My
gosh, this kid takes these lunch orders. The secretaries don't even get
it right. He's only a kid and he gets the lunch orders correct. There's
never a mistake.' And the brokers, from that summer on, always called
him 'the kid.'
NS: They still call him--
AS: Even after he's married and he had two children, all the brokers
used to say to Dad, 'How's the kid doin'?' And they still refer to him
as 'the kid.'
NS: They do. When they talk to me, they say, 'How is your family doing?'
You know, 'How's the kid?' I still hear it.