Monday, September 06, 2004
456 Steubenville and Mt. Morris
Mr. Kerry was in Steubenville, Ohio this past week. I read that protestors made up half the crowd, which wasn’t very large. Ohio gets a lot of attention from both the President and the man who would be President. I certainly hope he didn’t bring up that tired nonsense about outsourcing and manufacturing jobs. Steubenville is part of Ohio’s “rustbelt,” and it was killed by the unions in the 1970s, when they wouldn’t allow companies to eliminate jobs by improving technology, something that all companies do. First, companies just moved out of state--now they move out of the country. You wouldn’t be working at a computer right now if your department had kept all its secretaries and clerks and hadn’t forced you into learning word processing.
The effects of a strike at a printing plant in my home town in Illinois which was never satisfactorily settled (and the strikers moved on to well paid jobs in Mississippi), lingers today, 30 years later. It was the lesser paid workers and all the small businesses that depended on a flourishing company that suffered. The economic disaster caused by this strike was worse than the fire that demolished the town’s college in 1931.
“How much the community benefited from the company was demonstrated on May 10, 1974. On that day photo engravers at the company began a strike. A week later the book binders joined them on the picket line. This strike continued for six and a half years, one of the longest in northern Illinois' history. The enrollment in the Mount Morris schools declined in the strike years. Many community leaders feared Mount Morris would become a ghost town when many of the Kable employees found work elsewhere and moved away. After the strike ended, everything began to look much brighter for the community. The strike seriously depressed the community's economy.” The Kable Brothers Company
People less committed to the town's values began to move in, people who didn't care about education, churches and helping your neighbor. Bond issues failed. Now the town has lost its high school and is bussing its children to the next town, and may soon lose its elementary school, which burned down in a disastrous fire this year.
A town without a school system has no soul; a town with a greedy union has no heart.
Sunday, September 05, 2004
455 What they didn't say
“Tonight I will talk about this good man and his fine record leading our country. And I may say a word or two about his opponent. I am also mindful that I have an opponent of my own. People tell me that Senator Edwards got picked for his good looks, his sex appeal, and his great hair. I say to them — how do you think I got the job?”That’s good for a chuckle. But I ran a word check on the entire speech and neither Cheney nor President Bush ever said Kerry was “unfit” (alluding to the Swiftboat vets ad), nor did they question his patriotism. So why is the Washington Post (Thursday) and Kerry saying they did?
Full Text of Vice President Cheney’s speech
Full Text of President Bush’s speech
454 Boys will be boys
Friday night at the fireworks on the lakefront we had the opportunity to see families enjoying the last week-end of the summer season. We took our lawn chairs down about 8:30, but the first blast didn't go off for about 30 minutes. Looking around, I noticed three things, two timeless and the other timely.First, little boys were running, wrestling, shouting Karate moves, ordering the other children to watch (one little guy actually said, "Now, feast your eyes on this!") and being belligerent in front of the little girls who licked their lollipops, played with little lighted worms, and quietly watched the little boys acting like chipmunks on speed.
Second, the older adults (50+) quietly conversed with each other and the group on the next blanket, or snuggled in the cooler air. They watched the children and reminisced and told stories of an earlier, but similar time.
Third, the teens and young adults, bored with the wait, pulled out their cell phones, making little spots of light throughout the crowd waiting in the dark, checking for messages, talking to people not a part of our little community, and taking digital photos of the people who were.
Saturday, September 04, 2004
453 Multiplying shirts and shrinking pants
We are packing to go home for a few weeks, leaving some clothing here at the lake house for the cooler fall days in September and October. Seemed a good time to straighten out the folded items in the dresser. My goodness! The t-shirts have multiplied and all the jeans have shrunk!
My husband has been teaching VBS since 1993, and has 8 of those shirts here--electric lime green, black, brilliant royal blue, white, etc. I attended the Medical Library Association meetings from 1989 to 1999 (didn't attend my last year since I hate good-byes) and have the "Walk with Majors" t-shirts--about 8 of them, mostly white or red. Then there are the Lakeside t-shirts, most too scruffy to wear, but which are "favorites," two of our own design, a Tony Packo shirt (restaurant, Toledo) and a University of Illinois shirt. Then there were 5 plain t-shirts from Wal-Mart in beautiful (to me) colors. Also I uncovered five t-shirts we had designated as "work shirts" some time back but had misplaced. I think some of those mysteriously travelled up from Columbus at different times.
There is a pair of jeans 33 x 30 that should be my husband's but he claims they don't meet in the middle by 2 inches and swears they aren't his. I found a pair of women's jeans in a size 8 petite. When was I ever that small? When I was 12? Also a pair of loden green jeans I bought up here at a yard sale for $1.00, but are now too small.
Before leaving for Chicago I ran my hose and we dashed off to the store because I couldn't find any in the drawer. I've found seven, never worn, new pair this morning, still in the package, buried under the multiplying t-shirts and shrinking pants. Summer wardrobe rabbit sydrome.
Friday, September 03, 2004
452 What Kerry Could Do
Paul Cella writes at Tech Central that Kerry has two choices to get out of his VietNam dilemma:(1) He could boldly stand by his position of some thirty years ago, when he went before Congress as an eloquent antiwar voice; he could reassert the view he propounded then, which was the view of the antiwar movement in general: namely, that the United States military, during the war it conducted in Vietnam, became in essence a criminal organization, from top to bottom countenancing and even encouraging cruelty, plunder, atrocity and mayhem. Now I want to say, in all sincerity, that if it is true what the John Kerry and antiwar movement alleged; if it is true that the whole institution of the military was implicated in the most awful of crimes, that events such as the My Lai massacre were not evil anomalies, but quotidian features of the war effort -- policy, even, promulgated implicitly or surreptitiously by its commanders; if the war was waged not by mostly honorable officers, mostly honorable soldiers, and a few cowards, madmen and psychopaths, but rather by a throng of fiends; if, in short, the American military conducted itself in Vietnam not as the armed force of a civilized nation, but as the savage and sanguinary instrument of a barbarian tribe, then Senator Kerry should stand by his condemnation. Indeed, he should thunder it from the rooftops. Patriotism that gives succor to such wickedness is no virtue; it is vicious madness.Cella doesn't expect he'll make such a choice because either way he would loose a critical part of his constituency. Kerry's Impossible Choice
Alternatively, (2) Kerry could repudiate his previous statements root and branch as reckless, inflammatory, malicious imprudence; attribute it to a terrible fever that overtook him and parts of the country; and beg forgiveness from his fellow veterans and the American people whom he slandered so venomously. I, for one, would forgive him.
451 Imagine that--four years before Bush!
How can this be? Isn't the blame for outsourcing and stagnant wages and unemployment to be laid at the feet of Dubya? Look at this July 1997 article in HR Magazine."Insecurity on Main Street" is behind the concerns about outsourcing and staffing levels, says John McDowell, director of the Labor Center at Los Angeles Trade Technical College.HR Magazine is for human resource management professionals.
"There's a fear that employment is declining, a fear that is heightened by relatively high unemployment levels. [Federal Reserve Board Chairman] Alan Greenspan thinks unemployment figures are low, but members of the workforce see 6 million or 7 million people unemployed. There are a lot of part-time and temporary workers and discouraged workers. There's a lot of competition for jobs," says McDowell.
Also, disposable income and real wages have remained stagnant for workers, he says. "We are supposed to be in a recovery mode, but workers don't see it in their paychecks. The overall economy is healthier today, and the strike is returning as the mode to put pressure on, within the collective bargaining process."
450 Convention coverage and other Friday Thoughts
I've been listening to WJR [Detroit] "cover" the President's speech last night (I went to bed--10 p.m. is just too late), but so far all I've heard was Kerry's rambling speech of last night where he threw in every thing--except his 20 year lackluster record in the Senate. Kerry's again using VietNam to stump. Democrats started this with Dan Quayle's vice presidency because he was in the National Guard, they kept quiet about Bill's deferment, and now have returned to the theme. Kerry just can't get off the pot, poor guy. There is one bright spot if he gets elected. . .Hillary can't run in 2008. But America will survive the Johns pimping for all the tired, outdated liberalism of the 60s and 70s.Our Florida relatives are staying close to home. My brother's recently had some surgery so he's supposed to stay quiet. Niece Cindy and family are not leaving because they have too many pets. Niece Karen who was going to truck some supplies from DC for the Charley victims may have to wait now for the next disaster. We have no report on niece Susie and her family in Sarasota, but right now the Gulf side looks to be in better position than the Atlantic side.
Fireworks at Lakeside tonight, so the gates are down again. The weather is looking a tad overcast--hurricane forerunner? The Archives is having its yard sale at the train station instead of our street. I stopped by yesterday, but didn't buy anything. Biking up the hill was good exercise, however. Tomorrow is Barbershop night with friends coming in to have dinner with us. Then Sunday it is home to Columbus, where we will host one of the artists of the Labor Day show in Upper Arlington.
449 Whiny Political Ads
Ohio must be getting the bottom of the barrel as the undecideds ponder the issues, or we're a test market for bad political ads. The newest one I've seen (by Move On Org I think) is just a talking head of a middle-aged woman who looks like she's been sucking lemons, has just learned she has a fatal disease, and hasn't seen her hair dresser in a while. Well, why not? She says she is a Republican "financial advisor." She's concerned that speaking out/dissent isn't considered patriotic. (Has she not seen the Democrat protestors in New York patriotically trying to shut down the Republican convention?) But she, brave soul will not be afraid to speak out, even if she loses clients because she is voting for Kerry.There is all sorts of innuendo in the ad. But if she's a good financial advisor, why is she talking politics with her clients, except to report how the stock market has rebounded? We meet quarterly with our guy, and I have no idea what his party politics are--the subject has just never come up. He patiently explains risk, REITs, bonds, his fees, etc. If this gal (the person the actress is portraying) doesn't know what is off limits when in business situations, she deserves to lose clients, and it has nothing to do with her patriotism.
Her voting for Kerry may be her clue that it is time to stop calling herself a Republican. I was still registered as a Democrat when I voted for Bush in 2000, but changed my registration for the next primary. That's the only time anyone asks--certainly clients don't if you're good at your job.
Thursday, September 02, 2004
448 Thanks, Janet and Bob!
We caught an early morning train out of Toledo Tuesday and were picked up in downtown Chicago by Bob and Janet a few hours later. Chicago has a new, fabulous park, Millennium Park, so that was our first stop. Located in downtown Chicago on Michigan Avenue between Randolph and Monroe Streets, the 24.5-acre park was supposed to be ready for 2000, but it just kept growing. If you haven't been to Chicago for awhile, or since last year, don't miss this. It has wonderful fountains, and currently is running a photography exhibit called Family Album. It is a wonderful arena for concerts, food, art--and it didn't hurt a bit that we had fabulous weather.After lunch at Bob's favorite Greek restaurant, Greek Islands, we headed for Oak Park where they live, and where there are many examples of Frank Lloyd Wright's home designs from his early career. We got tickets for the 2 p.m. tour and while we waited, did a simple walking tour. The tour of Wright's early home with his first wife and six children, and his office was very informative. We saw the plans of some of the buildings we saw in Buffalo laid out on drafting tables, which really pulled it all together. We had a quiet evening at home enjoying our hosts' gracious early 20th century home with wonderful leaded art glass windows and natural woodwork.
Wednesday we started out early for the Robie House on the campus of the University of Chicago. That this house is still standing is no small miracle and it will take years and millions to restore it. It was used as a private residence for a relatively brief time, and has spent the rest of its existence in limbo, but appears now that it will be successfully restored. Across the street was the new Graduate School of Business building designed by Rafael Vinoly tying in the materials and design of Wright's Prairie style architecture and the Gothic style of Rockefeller Chapel.
After a nice lunch at a bakery downtown, we got in line for a 2 p.m. river architectural tour sponsored by the Chicago Architecture Foundation where our talented guide pointed out significant architecture for 90 minutes. On a beautiful day, it is the only way to see Chicago. After a quick tour through some badly blighted areas that have been recently gentrified, our wonderful hosts dropped us at Union Station, and our train left on time to the minute, and we arrived in Toledo near 11 p.m. and were back in Lakeside by midnight.
Chicago is our favorite city, and not hard to get to with Amtrak. If anyone from home is reading, you can catch the VanGalder Bus out of Rockford and meet us at Union Station downtown for a week-end of tourism, good food, and culture.
Monday, August 30, 2004
446 The RNC in New York City
I truly hope the main stream media can find something to talk about and focus on other than the protestors, even though I believe in the long run, they will make the Democrats look like a bunch of fringe lunatic losers.
There will be bloggers there who may be a better source of the news. WSJ online has an article about the bloggers credentialed for the Republican convention. Will it be different? Maybe:
"Some Republican convention bloggers also took shots at the Boston bloggers. Asked what they learned from Boston, some of the New York bloggers characterized the Boston coverage as self-absorbed and overly preoccupied with celebrity sightings. The Republican bloggers said they'd stay more focused on the issues and the convention itself -- a chance they'll get next week." Free link here.
Ben Domenech, a blogger I've never read, said in response to this question:"What did you learn from the Boston coverage? Just about everyone blogging from Boston had a completely misguided attitude towards convention coverage. The interesting part isn't talking about Michael Moore or Jon Stewart, but how the Michigan fan and the Ohio State fan get along after four cases of S'more Schnapps at the 25th Annual Gala to Stop Intellectual Piracy (which is just like normal piracy, except without the plunder and wimmins)."
445 The President at Ft. Meigs, Ohio
Only a thick filter of hate can cause one to say President Bush is not an effective speaker. We heard his entire speech Saturday live on a Toledo TV station (as near as I can tell, there is not a word about the speech in the Toledo Blade except to note on Friday that the President would be in Northwest Ohio on Saturday). Fort Meigs on the Maumee River was built in 1813 to protect northwest Ohio and Indiana from British invasion. I'm sure there is symbolism here someplace, lost on the local media. The speech was in front of about 15,000 party faithful who cheered no matter what he said or how. But from our living room, we could be a bit more discerning.I’ve never worked for a national campaign except for stuffing a few envelopes for the Democrats back in the early 70s, but I plan to call the Franklin County office when I get home and offer my services.
444 School Starts
Last Thursday I had to wait 20 minutes at the coffee bar while the clerk prepared huge vats of coffee for the teacher in-service day at Danbury schools. Then this morning I saw many students waiting at the end of the drive-ways and lanes for the bus. What was interesting and was probably just a phenomenon of first day, were the number of families and parents waiting with the children. I saw only one child standing alone. The Danbury website only has last year's schedule up--for the taxes we pay here in Lakeside (virtually no school age children), the least we should get is a current website I can show you!443 I know it was a legal product, but. . .
Somehow, this system looks a little odd when tobacco growers get a piece of the settlement pie."A year after the nation's tobacco companies reached an agreement with the country's attorneys general to pay billions of dollars for tobacco-related health-care costs, the companies made another agreement with the 14 states that grow tobacco.Daily Reporter
Four of the country's largest cigarette manufacturing companies established the National Tobacco Grower Settlement Trust to compensate tobacco farmers for lost sales and encourage them to branch out into other crops.
As a result of the settlement trust, Ohio tobacco farmers will receive more than $70 million over 12 years.
Sunday, August 29, 2004
442 Last week-end of the season
The end of the 9th week at Lakeside was dynamite! The symphony closed out its 41st season Friday night with Berlioz, Bach, Shostakovich and Dvorak. The pianist, Antonio Pompa-Baldi, knocked our socks off and even kept me awake.Than Saturday night Hoover auditorium was filled almost to capacity to hear the Fifth Dimension, popular 60s-70s close harmony group. Two of the originals are still in the group, Florence LaRue and Lamont McLemore, and the other three are equally talented, Greg Walker, Willie Williams and Van Jewell. If you ever have the opportunity (the schedule looks like they perform perhaps once or twice a month), they are well worth the price and trip--putting on an outstanding two hour show.
The Annual antique show with about 25 dealers was Saturday afternoon. Patty and I went--we used to see the items from our mothers' and grandmothers' homes--now we're starting to see "antiques" from our homes since we've both been married over 40 years. Sunday morning the four of us attempted to attend church on the lakefront at the pavilion, however, the wind was blowing the rain all over the chairs, so we left for breakfast at The Abigail. Our house guests left about 10 a.m.
The gates went up at 8 a.m. Sunday. They will temporarily come down next week-end for the Barbershop show. We'll be here to see our friends Andy and Mary Frances who keep a sailboat at Port Clinton and come over for that, then we'll return to Columbus to enjoy the Labor Day Art Show.
Saturday, August 28, 2004
441 Clean up time
There is a web site (free) to check your web page for bad and outdated links. LinkScan/Quick Check is easy to use. However, when I fed it my URL, it found many things to warn me about in my template--something over which I have no control. Also, I had numerous messages about inserting some code inside others, which made no sense to me at all. But HTML is a foreign language to me, so I suppose I don't know all the nuances of the language. Also, it found mistakes in things I had quoted, and I also have no control over those. In general, it was a pretty clean site.Friday, August 27, 2004
440 They don't make things like they used to--Thank Goodness!
Our neighbor Jack just stopped by and gave us $20 for our wicker chair we bought in 1989. We had put a price tag of $25 on it and had planned to put it in the yard this morning. He's also a client, so we cut a deal. It was part of a 4 piece set we bought 15 years ago for $200. Last night we bought a very nice resin white rocker for the porch and needed to make some room.This cottage (actually a house built in 1943 with hvac and plaster walls, but it is customary here to refer to a second home as a "cottage") was my first opportunity to decorate something with a "theme" or unified color scheme. We chose the colors cream, light blue and pink/mauve; blue carpeting, and coordinated wallpaper borders throughout--sandpipers in the kitchen, geese in the master bedroom, light houses in the guest room, and nautical things in the bath. The basics of furniture came with the house--desk, couch, bookcase, kitchen table/4 chairs, 1 bedroom suite, and a nice 1930s cedar chest.
It was fun to go to the hardward store in Marblehead and buy things for the kitchen and bath. I bought blue plastic dishpan and dish drainer and mat, a blue plastic tall wastebasket, a blue plastic laundry basket, some small table lamps in blue and cream ($9 ea.), miscellaneous kitchen utensils like knives, forks, salad tongs, scissors, a canister set in blue, etc. There was no Wal-Mart around (I don't think I'd ever heard of it), so I went to a Kresge's in Sandusky and bought valances and bedspreads, and inexpensive,thin towels (dry faster in damp air). I had the fun part; my husband had the hard stuff like preparing, patching and painting the walls and woodwork, left unattended for 40 years and quite dirty.
This is our 16th summer here. I look around and all the cheapo plastic stuff and bargain basement linens are still being used and have held their color. True, the cottage doesn't get used 365 days of the year, but it all has had heavy use.
One item they truly don't make any more the way they used to is light bulbs. We found some light bulbs in a box when we moved in. One bulb we inserted in a floor lamp in 1988 is still working.
Thursday, August 26, 2004
439 The Colors of Summer--Fading Fast
I've had my eye on them all summer--the pepper colors in the produce section of Bassett's. There is a watercolor class this week, so today I bought them and will take them to class to share.Green bell pepper
Yellow bell pepper
Orange bell pepper
Red bell pepper
Lime green banana pepper
Dark green jalapeno pepper
Lavender Eggplant
White Eggplant
I'm taking along a simple white bowl, a dishcloth from the 1950s (trimmed in primary colors), a knife with a wooden handle, and a large onion.
Unfortunately, I never use peppers in cooking or salads. Still, I'm hoping for a pretty painting.
Update: The painting
Wednesday, August 25, 2004
Reasons to Celebrate a 50th Wedding Anniversary
While looking for something else, today I came across my file of letters, 1980-1990. I wrote my parents once a week, usually, and then would periodically retrieve my letters which my mother saved. It gave me a good diary in the days before blogs. I've been married 45 years, so finding this letter giving my own parents advice and reasons they should celebrate their 50th made me realize we'll be there soon. Apparently, Dad had decided early that there would be NO 50th celebration. His word was law in our family and he and I knocked heads often. I wrote this letter almost two years before the fact, so it was apparently an item of family discussion. I won--they did have a wonderful celebration in August 1984.
Dear Folks,
I wanted to ask you again to reconsider about having a 50th wedding anniversary reception. I really do consider it an important milestone, not only in your lives, but in the lives of your children and grandchildren. Maybe it isn't the kind of thing you normally enjoy, but it only happens once.
It is unlikely that your whole family will ever be together again (children and grandchildren) in the same location--our ages and locales are just getting too divergent. Julie, Dave, Karen, Cindy and Greg are all adults now, and by the summer of 1984 even your youngest grandchild will be a teen-ager. This would probably be the last time we would ever all be "Home" at the same time. Even that idea may not be appealing to you, but that's not a very good reason to NOT have a get together.
One of the most significant things I remember about Grandad [my father's grandfather] is that he never wanted anyone to have a family reunion, so the only time I ever saw some of my cousins on that side was at his funeral. I think it was the first time I met Sharon [cousin 3 years older than me]. The logic of his reasoning is beyond me--we did all get together, but he missed it.
You were married during the Depression, survived the war years, struggled through business ups and downs, maintained your cool with four teen-agers, redeemed the empty nest with new careers and interests, suffered the loss of your parents, siblings, grandchildren, and helped mend broken relationships. I don't want you to celebrate the fact that two handsome, smart, naive kids got married in 1934, but the fact that those two young people were able to support and love each other and the many people whose lives depended on them.
How about punch and cake at the church, and about two days when everyone tried to get to Mt. Morris at the same time--lots of pictures and memories for my children and their cousins to tell their grandchildren. And if their recall is only that they talked to their 2nd or 3rd cousin whom they never saw again, well, what's so bad about that?
The two of you have always lived around family--you probably don't even realize the sense of connectedness and security that gives you because you take it for granted. But we don't--so we have to settle for a few intense, hectic days once in awhile to have that same sense of belonging. I hope you will rethink your decision not to have a 50th wedding celebration.
Love,
