Friday, February 10, 2023

On this day in Oshkosh WI, February 1982: Letter to a 1970s Montana State Library colleague now living in Olympia, Washington

 

Dear Connie, 

Early last summer, my correspondence entered what has turned out to be an extended lull period. It was very easy not to write letters since, outside of Mom, no one was writing to me on a regular basis. Every once in awhile, a hand-addressed envelope would accompany the usual bills and junk mail and Reader's Digest sweepstakes proclamations. It's no thrill to see my name printed in computer type. When a series of unrelated catalogs were addressed (and delivered) to a Paul Nelson at 1312 Space Street without difficulty last summer, I didn't know whether to be insulted or amused. 

As you were winging your way over Wisconsin last June (and offering me that promised toast at 10,000 feet), I no doubt was sitting in my office at the library working diligently to tune out all the negative influences that, even today, continue to bombard me. At this time, I don't want to delve into the agonizing details     of the crisis at OPL. The surprise is not that it occurred, but rather that it occurred as intensively as it did. The department heads who have worked at the library as long as the present director knew something was amiss very early on. We have a director who doesn't know how to direct. He offers us no leadership; he runs at the first sign of a tough decision. 

In October, I orchestrated what could have easily developed into a mutiny had not the other department heads been so concerned about job security.  Of course, none of them have an office right next door to Dick's. They don't see the daily, mind-numbing examples of laziness and incompetence. Eventually, the library board got wind of our discontent and asked each of us (the department heads, the business manager, the administrative secretary) a prepared list of questions individually. As one board member casually leaked to me a couple weeks later, "Something must definitely be wrong. The answers were too consistent to think otherwise." 

The board confronted Dick in mid-November and supposedly gave him an ultimatum: Hit the road by March 1, 1982. In the meantime, Dick has been sending out resumes (the last fat business envelope with his return address that I saw is now in the hands -- or files -- of the director of personnel in Gainesville, Florida) and making an unusually large number of long-distance phone calls. He confided to his secretary that he does indeed plan to leave, "but not without a fight". In other words, he wants to inflict as much damage as possible before he leaves. According to reports from my colleagues, Dick has been using me as a target for his heaviest ammunition. He's even dredged up my "flirtation" with gun running in Montana, the true story of which he knew about before hiring me. Now he's embellishing it beyond recognition, but then I have a column from the Great Falls Tribune (Dick Peel sent me the newspaper in a moment of admirable foresight -- I've always had this weird premonition that I was going to have to deal with it again) which clearly explains this bizarre, fantastic episode in my life. 


After three unfulfilling attempts to convince myself that I am a librarian, I'm ready to move on to something different. I bought myself a piano a month ago and have been practicing an average of 2-3 hours a day. So far I have 45 minutes of material memorized, including the first movement of Beethoven's "Moonlight Sonata". On my days off, six hours of playing time, broken up into sensible stretches, is not unusual. I took piano lessons for seven years through grade school and junior high and never took people seriously when they told me what a wonderful talent I have.  After burying my hands for sixteen years, I have finally come to my senses. I'll try to remember to enclose bookmarks advertising my two latest film series at the library. The "Bogie" retrospective was an undiluted success. They Drive By Night was unavailable at the minute, so for 1/3 its usual rental rate, I was able to substitute The Big Sleep. Even Sahara drew a near-capacity staff house. From the feedback the staff at the circulation desk has been hearing, the Bette Davis/Joan Crawford retro promises to be an even bigger draw than Bogart.


Meet the GOP and Democratic leadership of the Wisconsin state legislature

 

Related posts: 
Spineless Wisconsin GOP leadership unable to build support for medical marijuana.  (2/1/2023)
Wisconsin GOP shows off the diversity of its legislative leadership.  (12/21/2022)
With another heated Wisconsin election around the corner, Republicans delude themselves into thinking they can defuse abortion as an issue.  (12/7/2022)
It took all of 15 seconds for these 6 white guys -- the Wisconsin GOP legislative leadership -- to slam the door on reproductive rights.  (10/4/2022)
Reproductive rights? Fuggedaboudit! What else would you expect from these Wisconsin GOP Gomers?. (8/27/2022)
Distrust of elections? What about contempt for Wisconsin's all-white, all-male GOP leadership?. (3/28/2022)
Apparently, the all-white, all-male Wisconsin GOP leadership must think they're something special.  (3/8/2022)

On this day in 1971: Letter to high school friend written during junior year of college



 
Dear Mark, 

 Enough of Moby-Dick. It's putting me to sleep, as it has done during the past few days that I'm reading it. I should be able to finish by Monday. That will be quite an accomplishment, since the book is such a bore. 

Even though some of the books I'm reading aren't my favorites, this semester should be one of my best. All the lectures are interesting. I can easily see that I might not be playing cutting any classes. 

 The reason for that slip (playing instead of writing "cutting") is that I'm listening to one of Rod Stewart/s albums and he had just sung the line, "playing her fast games". I'm having trouble keeping my mind on the letter. 

I'm taking a teacher education course, mainly for something to fall back on in the future. I definitely won't be student teaching next year. That would mean going to summer school or staying here an extra semester. The choice is obvious. What I'm thinking of doing now is to go to grad school and then maybe teach at the college level. In May of 1972, I'll be no better off than 4 years before with a high school diploma. Ridiculous, isn't it? 

I gave up cigarettes, at least I don't buy them anymore. Every so often, I'll bum one, but that occurs twice a day. Haven't smoked any dope in almost three weeks. Its availability has been near zero. So here I sit with practically no vices at all. 

Tuition is increasing $300 for me next year, from $600 to $900 a year. On top of this, the PHEAA scholarships seem to have fizzled out. That means working all summer so I won't have to take out a loan. If I do decide to go to graduate school, I'd like to be in the clear as far as loans go. I've been making money by giving blood plasma, twice as week for $5 each time. Today I made $17, the usual $5, plus a $12 bonus. From now on I'll be getting a bonus every six times. It's not a gold mine, but it gives me spending money. My friends think I'm crazy to do this. I've never before had so much motherly advice given to me. 

I noticed the Moody Blues are going to be in Rochester on April 14, so you should be seeing me then. I definitely don't want to miss that concert. I have no plans for Easter. My roommates have been talking about going down to Great Smoky Mountains National Park.



GET ME REWRITE: Time for Wisconsin's GOP legislative leadership to step up and ban discriminatory housing covenants

 
HeadlineMilwaukee Journal Sentinel,2/9/2023
Originally proposed by the city's equity and inclusion commission, the Racial Covenant Resolution urges Gov. Tony Evers and state legislators to enact laws that would remove, or make it easier for property owners to remove, racist and antisemitic language that once banned Black and Jewish people from living in certain areas. 
"This is a vestige of a very bad and dark time in this city," said Wauwatosa Mayor Dennis McBride before the council's vote. "I compared this to pulling down our Confederate statues, which we do not have. We're pulling down these." 
Ald. Joe Phillips told the council on Tuesday that Rep. Robyn Vining is working on legislation to be introduced in the Wisconsin State Assembly. 
Restrictive covenants became unenforceable in 1948 and were specifically made illegal after the Fair Housing Act in 1968, but the damage they caused can't be erased. That's why education from projects like Mapping Racism and Resistance, which aims to document and map restrictive covenants in Milwaukee County, is key, said Ald. Margaret Arney.

Related posts: 
Spineless Wisconsin GOP leadership unable to build support for medical marijuana.  (2/1/2023)
Wisconsin GOP shows off the diversity of its legislative leadership.  (12/21/2022)
With another heated Wisconsin election around the corner, Republicans delude themselves into thinking they can defuse abortion as an issue.  (12/7/2022)
It took all of 15 seconds for these 6 white guys -- the Wisconsin GOP legislative leadership -- to slam the door on reproductive rights.  (10/4/2022)
Reproductive rights? Fuggedaboudit! What else would you expect from these Wisconsin GOP Gomers?. (8/27/2022)
Distrust of elections? What about contempt for Wisconsin's all-white, all-male GOP leadership?. (3/28/2022)
Apparently, the all-white, all-male Wisconsin GOP leadership must think they're something special.  (3/8/2022)

Thursday, February 9, 2023

It's deja vu all over again: Sears, Roebuck & Company was once a retail pioneer

 
HeadlineWisconsin State Journal, 2/9/2023

It's the beginning of the end.
The company has avoided a bankruptcy filing for now by completing a complex stock offering that will give it an immediate injection of $225 million in funds and a pledge for $800 million in the future to pay down its current debt load. Bed Bath & Beyond is also shrinking to save money.\ 
The company said it plans to close around 400 of its roughly 760 Bed Bath & Beyond stores. It will keep open its most profitable stores in key markets.

Related reading:

Business Insider, 12/19/2022

Sears closed its Madison WI West Towne Mall stores in September 2018.  The space is now occupied by Hobby Lobby, Total Wine, and Dave and Buster's.

Photo by Retiring Guy


On this day in Middleton WI in 2000: Letter to Mom in Warren PA




Dear Mom, 

Earlier in the week, Andy made an unexpected observation.

“This school year is going by so fast,” he said as he was getting his stuff together one morning. 

I shared Andy’s remark at a meeting this afternoon. Most of the staff present seemed to think it was an unusual utterance. Eve, the children’s librarian, who’s seven or eight years older than I am, said she didn’t really get a sense of time going fast until she was in high school. 

My feelings of time quickly slipping away didn’t occur until after the first semester of my freshman year at college. At the time, and even in retrospect, the fall of 1968 seemed to be a period of my life when I was suspended in time.   I suppose a lot of it had to do with the new experience of living away from home and being in an environment where most of the people I interacted with – my roommates, the people on the shuttle bus between the off-campus apartments where I lived and the UB campus, my classmates that filled the lecture halls, the students milling about in Norton Union – were the same age as I was. It was an insular world where we spent almost all of our time in the company of our peers, which initially was a wonderful, sometimes exhilarating experience. Our campus community, like others then and before and since, did not reflect what was going on in the workaday world.  The best example of this insularity is a vignette from my last semester at UB. 

I remember walking with a friend of mine to the union after a Modern American Literature class on the day after the 1972 Presidential election.  “I can’t believe that McGovern lost,” Sue bemoaned. “Everybody I know voted for him.”  Fortunately, college life didn’t cause me to become that disconnected with the real world. 


 “I saw something good on the news today,” Eddie informed me as I drove him to school this morning. 

During our morning “rush hour” at home, the kitchen TV is always tuned to NBC’s Today Show.  JoAnna doesn’t like a quiet house in the morning, and the program also serves as a way for the boys to keep up on current events. Every once in awhile, though, I want to take a sledgehammer to the TV screen, like today when Katie Couric – or was it Matt Lauer, this aging brain can’t recall – interviewed a mother and daughter from Littleton, Colorado, for their reactions to an apology offered by a Florida teen who sent threatening email messages to Columbine High School. Give it a rest, I say! Unable to listen to their blather, I instead made disparaging remarks about the mother’s poufy crown of shoulder-length hair. Another interview earlier in the week also had my blood boiling, but I’ve already forgotten who the focus of my animus was. I must be warming up – or is it cooling down? -- for the senior mental fitness challenge.

 “What was that?” I asked, curious to know what caught his attention.   

“There’s a new airplane. It has leather seats and TV.” 

“That must be an expensive plane to fly on,” I surmised.  

“It costs five dollars to watch TV,” Eddie said, as if to contradict my statement. 

  let out a whistle, making it sound like I thought that was a hefty expenditure. 

 Again, Eddie seemed to disagree with my response. 

“Five dollars isn’t a lot of money,” he asserted. 

I wouldn’t have thought so when I was Eddie’s age. In 1959, when I was 10 years old, five dollars was a princely sum. I could have inserted a nickel into the pop machine outside of Foreman’s and pulled out a 7-ounce Orange Crush in a bottle of shapely design. I could have spent less than a quarter and walked away with a small bag full of penny candy – fireballs, licorice, malted milk balls, plus a pretzel stick or two from a clear container on top of the glass counter.


Nowadays Andy and Eddie will walk to Walgreen’s and return with a bag of Twizzlers and Sweet Tarts and gum and a few coins in exchange for a five-dollar bill. How times have changed – and then again, how they haven’t. The days of penny candy are long gone, but kids still have a forceful sweet tooth. 

My Benjamin Franklin act has been put on hold. The alarm clock has brought me back to consciousness every morning this week. I listen to the national and local news before getting out of bed and beginning my morning routine. Sometimes I wish I could get away with 4 or 5 hours of sleep a night. I’d get a lot more writing and reading and other personal projects done, although it’s not as if I’m currently unproductive in those areas. 

Have you been watching "Who Wants To Be a Millionaire?"   JoAnna sometimes tunes it in as she pauses from her channel surfing. I enjoy it in small doses. We watched the last 20 minutes of tonight’s show, and I caught 15 minutes of Monday’s installment. I haven’t seen any of the other prime-time game shows. With ABC having hit the motherlode, the other networks are now looking for riches of their own in the same mine. I’m sure this programming phenomenon will very likely be short-lived

I was planning to continue this letter over the weekend but will enclose what I have written so far in your Valentine’s Day card.

On this day in Oshkosh WI February 1982: Letter to a friend and former colleague at G. & C. Merriam in Springfield Massachusetts

 

Photo by Retiring Guy
Dear Jim, 

[5:45 a.m.] The early bird breaks his long period of silence. Starting the day before the sun rises has become a daily habit since early January. I am hoping that this new leaf will produce a revival in my correspondence, a habit which I lost interest in last spring. 

Dan has been keeping me informed about the labor troubles on Federal Street.  Did the vote not to organize relieve the tensions that had been developing or are people holding grudges because of the pro or con stand each person took? 

The ongoing problem at the Oshkosh Public Library -- an incompetent director -- has still not been resolved.  The library board of trustees has scheduled an executive session for the third Wednesday of this month, at which time a final determination will be made whether to allow Dick Miller to stay on, perhaps under some kind of probationary period, or to terminate him, either by demanding his resignation or firing him. The supervisory staff was given no indication last November, when the crisis first surfaced, as to what options the board was considering. The one rumor that we all would like to believe is that the board requested Dick's resignation and gave him until March 1st to clean out his office, in that way giving him time to look for another job. We know that he is looking, but we also know that he has hired an attorney who specializes in personal injury cases. In this case, Dick feels his reputation and good character have been unfairly maligned. If he decides to go to court to determine a settlement, his reputation and good character will be completely destroyed. We are dealing with a very sick man. 

If the board decides that Dick is competent enough to carry on his duties -- which, as he sees it, includes reading the newspaper, talking on the phone, taking an hour-long coffee break at a downtown restaurant with some of the "boys" from City Hall, wandering aimlessly around the library, standing up various groups for which he has been scheduled to speak -- then they can expect a likely immediate turnover in quite a few staff positions. I'm sure I'll be one of the first to leave. The administrative secretary is already suffering from the ill consequences of a stressful work environment. The business manager and various department heads are already looking. 

I realize I haven't given you a complete picture of what is happening at the library.  Personally, it is a troublesome situation to deal with one that I'd much rather tune it out when I'm not working. Who can "talk shop" when a destructive monster is on the loose? 

To relieve my own feelings of stress, I recently purchased a piano and have been practicing about three hours a day on the average. In three weeks I have committed seven pieces to memory, which allows me to sit down and play without music for 45 minutes or so. I plan to keep expanding my repertoire indefinitely. In another month or so, I'd like to take lessons from someone with a very strong background in jazz. I already have the classical foundation. My latest musical project is Rachmaninoff's "Prelude in C sharp minor". I'm just about at the breakthrough point, having memorized the first page, mastered pages two and three, and decoded four and five. It's quite a razzle-dazzle piece of piano music, definitely a show-off number. 

Thanks for the Christmas card. I'm a terrible procrastinator when it comes to holiday greetings. 1982 looks promising. It won't be the year of hedonistic overindulgence that made 1981 so uniquely enjoyable. This year I'll concentrate on music instead of partying.

Let the 2024 election speculation begin: Will Ron DeSantis become Scott Walker 2.0?

 
Flaming out courtesy of PhotoFunia
Headline Wisconsin State Journal, 2/9/2023
“In the Republican field, there are some who are good fighters. They haven’t won those battles. There are others who have won elections but haven’t consistently taken on the big fights,” the golden boy of the right says, straight to the camera. “I’ve done both.” 
Sound like a suitable ad for Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ eventual presidential campaign debut? Play Video A decade later, former Gov. Scott Walker said he views Act 10 as one of the best things he's done for the state. 
Those were actually words from former Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker’s 2015 announcement video. It may seem like a lifetime ago, but there was a time when Walker was the “fighter” Republicans craved. He won the governorship three times in four years, thanks to a vicious effort to recall him after he successfully orchestrated a huge victory against public sector unions in his state.

Actually, this speculation has been going on for nearly a year now.


Other DeSantis posts: 
2023
Boneheaded Florida Governor pushes racist agenda.  (1/27/2023)

2022
When it comes to the GOP attacking Black candidates, it's deja vu all over again.  11/11/2022)
What's wrong with this picture?  (6/29/2022)
So this is the best the GOP has to offer (Death wish for American democracy).  (6/23/2022)
Florida high school principal to senior class president: "Don't say gay!"  (5/24/2022)
Baby, scratch my back: Florida GOP governor Ron DeSantis math textbook ban is good thing for Virginia GOP governor Glenn Youngkin's bottom line.  (4/26/2022)
It can happen here.  (1/18/2022)
Ron DeSantis fiddles while Florida burns with the omicron variant.  (1/10/2022)

2021
Dear insane fuckup Ron DeSantis, Nobody should die from the virus due to heavy-handed anti-vax mandates from a crazed, power-mad governor. (11/24/2021)Meet the University of Florida Board of Governors.  (11/5/2021)

CES2020: Ampere Side Pocket Wireless fanny pack (2023 UPDATE)


Not flying off the shelves, but but 141 customers really really like it.


Only 5 verified customer reviews in 2022, the most recent one dated October 3.


Original 1/24/2020 post starts here



10 Gadgets from CES 2020 that you can buy now.  (TechStory, 1/25/2020)
A quirky innovation from Ampere Tech, The Ampere Side Pocket Wireless in a smart fanny pack with a built-in wireless input/output 13,400mAh power bank. The bag features USB-A as well as USB-C outputs, and a waterproof outer casing, with a power bank battery indicator. Available on the Ampere website for $130, the Side Pocket Wireless promises to be a future essential for travelers.

Other CES2020 posts:
November 2019
SmartyPans.  (11/11/2019)
Warming up for CES2020 with a modern version of "Play Misty for Me".  (11/29/2019)

January 1-15, 2020
Pizza served up by Picnic(TM) robot.  (1/3/2020)
FutureLight files the Waydoo Flyer under 'bizarre'.  (1/3/2020)
Townew automated garbage can, a discomposing sign of the times.  (1/8/2020)
When it comes to useless consumer technology products, Charmin Rollbot wipes the competition!  (1/8/2020)
LG encourages you to grow your own with its indoor garden appliance.  (1/9/2020)
And the promise of a flying car just keeps on floating.  (1/10/2020)
Qoobo and Petit Qoobo, robot pillows in two sizes.  (1/11/2020)
Meet Samsung's Ballie, who looks like a yellow softball and will follow you everywhere.  (1/11/2020)
U by Moen smart faucet.  (1/11/2020)
Scary future brought to you by Samsung Neon.  (1/11/2020)
Climate360 smart bed.  (1/11/2020)
MamaRoo Sleep Bassinet keeps parents in dreamland.  (1/12/2020)
Segway S-Pod.  (1/12/2020)
Stick-up, highway robbery, case of grand larceny: Core meditation trainer.  (1/13/2020)
One-wheel Yeti cooler.  (1/13/2020)
Cubii Go compact seated elliptical device.  (1/14/2020)

January 16-31, 2020
LG ThinkQ smart door.  (1/17/2020)
BMW 13 Urban Suite concept car.  (1/20/2020)
Sing along with the Kohler Moxie shower head.  (1/21/2020)
Clean your teeth 10 seconds with the Y-Brush toothbrush.  (1/22/2020)
The Narwal:  It mops and vacuums!  (1/25/2020)

The archives:
2019
2018
2017
2016
2015

Wednesday, February 8, 2023

Nancy Nollinger Burton (1946-2023) Warren Area High School class of 1964

 
1964 Dragon yearbook

1967 Warren City Directory

    1983 Warren City Directory 


    The popularity of Nancy baby name is graphed here.  Let's take a look at Chelsea.
    Chelsea debuted in 1969 and eventually became one of the most popular baby names for girls in the 1990s.  She peaked at #15 in 1992 and has been in a steep slide since 2015.
     
    Give credit to Joni Mitchell starting something .
     
    From Joni's second album Clouds (1969)
     

    Other members of the class of 1964 (27):
    2022

    2021
    Earl Huber.  (10/26)
    Gary Johnson.  (9/4)
    Linda Repine.  (3/14)

    2020
    Thomas Mintzer.  (6/14)
    Ernest Hoag, Jr.  (1/11)

    2019
    David Rydholm.  (8/7)
    Jacqueline King Jeffords.  (6/11)
    Eugene Smith.  (2/5)

    2018
    Jean Tickner.  (12/10)
    Vincent Pace.  (6/6/)
    Robert Arnold.  (5/8)
    Burt Alexander.  (4/3)
    John Lindberg.  (3/27)

    2017
    James DeLong.  (11/6)
    Ruth Johnson Jackson.  (10/14)
    Gordon Eric Cedarquist.  (8/19)
    John David Pirillo.  (8/10)

    2016
    Dwight Drum, (8/1)

    2015
    David Holmberg.  (8/3)
    Susen Johnson Gebhardt.  (6/2)
    Delores Brady Geer.  (1/25)
    Judith McCool Madigan.  (1/26)

    2014
    Julia Barhight Verdot.  (9/5)
    Charles Lyon.  (1/12)

    Keeping tabs on authors in LINKcat: Ted Bell

     


    Source:  LINKcat

    New York Times, 2/7/2023
    Mr. Bell evolved from a successful advertising executive seductively pitching products like Heinz ketchup, Miller Lite beer and Marlboro cigarettes to an author of fever-pitch thrillers for readers enraptured by the exploits of Hawke, a British billionaire secret agent. 
    After the Young & Rubicam advertising agency, the world’s largest at the time, lured Mr. Bell from Leo Burnett U.S.A. to become its vice chairman and worldwide creative director in New York in 1993, he was asked to describe his creative philosophy. His answer, in the context of product promotion, might have applied correspondingly to his later career as an author. 
    The theme should be “fresh and fun and exciting” and “tell a real strong story,” Mr. Bell told The New York Times. 
    “The only reason we’re in this business,” he said, “is to sell.”





    Related posts:
    2023
    Russell Banks.  (1/11)
    David Harris.  (2/8)
    Paul Johnson.  (1/15)
    Charles Simic.  (1/16)
    Fay Weldon.  (2/2)

    2022
    Roger Angell.  (5/24)
    Melissa Bank.  (8/7)
    Raymond Briggs.  (8/20)
    Thomas Cahill. (11/16)
    Philip K. Dick.  (11/20)
    Bruce Duffy,  (3/13)
    Todd Gitlin.  (2/8)
    Rebecca Godfrey.  (11/11)
    Ron Goulart.  (2/7)
    Doris Grumbach.  (11/10)
    Robert Hicks.  (3/8)
    Thomas Hoving.  (12/19)
    Maureen Howard.  (3/19)
    Hilary Mantel.  (9/26)
    Nancy Mitford.  (4/4)
    P. J. O'Rourke.  (2/24)
    Julie Powell.  (11/5)
    Thomas Pynchon.  (12/17)
    Dennis Smith.  (1/27)
    Susie Steiner.  (7/27)
    Larry Woiwode.  (5/19)

    2021
    F. Lee Bailey.  (6/11)
    Kim Chernin.  (1/10)
    Angelo Codevilla.  (10/10)
    Stephen Dunn.  (6/29)
    James R. Flynn.  (1/30)
    Larry Flynt.  (2/12)
    Lucinda Franks.  (5/11)
    Joseph Galloway.  (8/25)
    Norman Golb.  (2/22)
    Charles Grodin.  (5/20)
    Maria Guarnascheilli, book editor.  (2/18)
    James Gunn.  (2/21)
    Tony Hendra.  (3/7)
    Donald Kagan.  (8/20)
    Hans Kung.  (4/9)
    Lyn Macdonald.  (5/15)
    Janet Malcolm.  (6/18)
    Peter Manso,  (4/10)
    Ved Mehta.  (1/12)
    Marie Mongan.  (3/22)
    Deborah Rhode.  (1/28)
    James Ridgeway.  (2/16)
    David Swensen.  (5/13)
    Bryan Sykes.  (1/14)
    Athan Theoharis.  (6/14/)
    Ed Ward.  (5/16)
    Michael Thomas.  (8/19)
    Adam Zagajewski.  (3/27)

    2020
    Ben Bova.  (12/17)
    Clive Cussler.  (2/29)
    Betty Dodson  (11/11)
    Pete Hamill.  (8/6)
    Shere Hite. (9/13)
    A, E, Hotchner.  (2/18)
    Roger Kahn.  (2/15)
    Randall Kenan.  (9/29)
    John Le Carre. (12/23/2020)
    Johanna Lindsey.  (1/15)
    Barry Lopez.  (12/29)
    Alison Lurie.  (12/7)
    Charlers Portis.  (2/19)
    Julia Reed.  (9/8)
    John Rothchild.  (1/22)
    Gail Sheehy.  (9/3)
    Jill Paton Walsh.  (11/29)
    Charles Webb.  (6/30)

    2019
    Warren Adler.  (4/23)
    Kate Braverman.  (10/28)
    Stephen Dixon.  (11/12)
    Dan Jenkins.  (3/10)
    Judith Krantz.  (6/27)
    Paule Marshall.  (8/27)
    Martin Mayer.  (8/3)
    Wright Morris.  (7/25)
    Toni Morrison.  (8/12)
    Anthony Price.  (6/17)
    John Simon.  (12/1)
    Sol Stein.  (9/30)
    Brad Watson.  (8/2)
    Lonnie Wheeler.  (7/15)
    Herman Wouk.  (5/20)

    2018
    Neal Thompson.  (6/17)

    2017
    Kit Reed.  (10/1)

    2016
    E. M. Nathanson.  (4/10)

    2015

    2014

    2013


    Keeping tabs on authors in LINKcat: David Harris

     

    SourceLINKcat

    New York Times, 2/7/2023
    Mr. Harris was an unlikely avatar of the antiwar movement. The son of a lawyer and a religiously conservative mother in California’s Central Valley, he entered Stanford University in 1963 after being elected “boy of the year” by his high school, where he debated and lettered in football. 
    But a freshman year awakening, including a few weeks working in Mississippi at the end of Freedom Summer in 1964, persuaded him that his generation had a moral obligation to fight injustice, including what he saw as the unfolding disaster in Vietnam. Over the next several years, he used his establishment standing to rise to national prominence, calling on his fellow students and other young people to confront the draft head on.




    Related posts:
    2023
    Russell Banks.  (1/11)
    Paul Johnson.  (1/15)
    Charles Simic.  (1/16)
    Fay Weldon.  (2/2)

    2022
    Roger Angell.  (5/24)
    Melissa Bank.  (8/7)
    Raymond Briggs.  (8/20)
    Thomas Cahill. (11/16)
    Philip K. Dick.  (11/20)
    Bruce Duffy,  (3/13)
    Todd Gitlin.  (2/8)
    Rebecca Godfrey.  (11/11)
    Ron Goulart.  (2/7)
    Doris Grumbach.  (11/10)
    Robert Hicks.  (3/8)
    Thomas Hoving.  (12/19)
    Maureen Howard.  (3/19)
    Hilary Mantel.  (9/26)
    Nancy Mitford.  (4/4)
    P. J. O'Rourke.  (2/24)
    Julie Powell.  (11/5)
    Thomas Pynchon.  (12/17)
    Dennis Smith.  (1/27)
    Susie Steiner.  (7/27)
    Larry Woiwode.  (5/19)

    2021
    F. Lee Bailey.  (6/11)
    Kim Chernin.  (1/10)
    Angelo Codevilla.  (10/10)
    Stephen Dunn.  (6/29)
    James R. Flynn.  (1/30)
    Larry Flynt.  (2/12)
    Lucinda Franks.  (5/11)
    Joseph Galloway.  (8/25)
    Norman Golb.  (2/22)
    Charles Grodin.  (5/20)
    Maria Guarnascheilli, book editor.  (2/18)
    James Gunn.  (2/21)
    Tony Hendra.  (3/7)
    Donald Kagan.  (8/20)
    Hans Kung.  (4/9)
    Lyn Macdonald.  (5/15)
    Janet Malcolm.  (6/18)
    Peter Manso,  (4/10)
    Ved Mehta.  (1/12)
    Marie Mongan.  (3/22)
    Deborah Rhode.  (1/28)
    James Ridgeway.  (2/16)
    David Swensen.  (5/13)
    Bryan Sykes.  (1/14)
    Athan Theoharis.  (6/14/)
    Ed Ward.  (5/16)
    Michael Thomas.  (8/19)
    Adam Zagajewski.  (3/27)

    2020
    Ben Bova.  (12/17)
    Clive Cussler.  (2/29)
    Betty Dodson  (11/11)
    Pete Hamill.  (8/6)
    Shere Hite. (9/13)
    A, E, Hotchner.  (2/18)
    Roger Kahn.  (2/15)
    Randall Kenan.  (9/29)
    John Le Carre. (12/23/2020)
    Johanna Lindsey.  (1/15)
    Barry Lopez.  (12/29)
    Alison Lurie.  (12/7)
    Charlers Portis.  (2/19)
    Julia Reed.  (9/8)
    John Rothchild.  (1/22)
    Gail Sheehy.  (9/3)
    Jill Paton Walsh.  (11/29)
    Charles Webb.  (6/30)

    2019
    Warren Adler.  (4/23)
    Kate Braverman.  (10/28)
    Stephen Dixon.  (11/12)
    Dan Jenkins.  (3/10)
    Judith Krantz.  (6/27)
    Paule Marshall.  (8/27)
    Martin Mayer.  (8/3)
    Wright Morris.  (7/25)
    Toni Morrison.  (8/12)
    Anthony Price.  (6/17)
    John Simon.  (12/1)
    Sol Stein.  (9/30)
    Brad Watson.  (8/2)
    Lonnie Wheeler.  (7/15)
    Herman Wouk.  (5/20)

    2018
    Neal Thompson.  (6/17)

    2017
    Kit Reed.  (10/1)

    2016
    E. M. Nathanson.  (4/10)

    2015

    2014

    2013