Tuesday, October 25, 2022

There's No Crying in Newsrooms

     Written by two women with lots of experience: Kristin Grady Gilger and Julia Wallace

    Like many other human activities, women have been forced to fight long and hard for acceptance and recognition in the world of journalism. 

Sunday, October 23, 2022

My father Swept the Floor

     There is no doubt the job of housekeeping is the most under-appreciated job in the universe.

    One Sunday my father accused my mother of being the worst housekeeper in the world. Besides keeping house, my mother did all the cooking -- home-made biscuits at least once a day. Taking care of two usually uncooperative children. Laundry with an antique wringer-washer. All this in addition to running the fourth-class postoffice which stood in a corner of our front yard.

    My father made quite a show of getting the broom and dustpan. Lectured as he swept the bare floor of the living room and adjacent dining room. "This is how you keep a tidy house."

    He was home from his work -- admittedly hard manual labor -- early on Wednesday. Impatiently waiting for his evening meal, he sank into the chair next to the radio -- this was well before television, Looking across the floor he was astonished to see dust mice frolicking across the wood floor. He stared, his vision affixed.

    "But," he finally muttered to himself, "I swept that floor on Sunday . . . "

Thursday, October 6, 2022

Fallen Journalists Memorial

    Senator Ben Cardin (D- MD) has filed SJ Res 62 to support the identification of a location just off the National Mall for a Fallen Journalists Memorial. To follow will be the selection of an architect to design the Memorial.

    Quoting from the September news item --Maryland Democratic Sen. Ben Cardin introduced a resolution Wednesday to locate the National Memorial to Fallen Journalists at a specific site in Washington, D.C.

    The memorial would be located between the Voice of America building and the Smithsonian National Museum of the American Indian, according to the joint resolution Cardin introduced with Republican Sen. Rob Portman from Ohio.

    Please contact your Congressperson and ask them to support SJ Res 62

Tuesday, October 4, 2022

The departure of Queen Elizabeth II

     I never met Queen Elizabeth II.

    Although I might have had an opportunity to see her, to watch her at some public event during the three months I spent in London. The London Times always announced the public appearances of the royal family.

    She died in Scotland. Her last official act was to invite a new prime minister to form a new government. I did not realize until I looked it up that Balmoral was so far north of Edinburgh. I was pleased to see the Scotland Standard draped over her coffin.

    I feared that the Scotland Standard would be replaced by the red-white-and blue flag of the British Union. At some point I caught a glimpse of a rehearsal in which the substitute coffin indeed was covered by the British Union flag. At what point would it be changed? Perhaps when the coffin left Westminster Abbey on the way to Windsor.

    No, there was no change, nor at any point. As the coffin slowly was lowered into a vault, it still bore the Scotland flag. The descent of the draped coffin was a somber happening to observe. No longer would I turn my computer on in the morning and read of the appearance of Queen Elizabeth II. We never knew each other, but our lifetimes were lived in a similar span of time. I shared the planet with someone who will be remembered through the history of time.

Saturday, September 10, 2022

Closed for the foreseeable . . . .

Queen Elizabeth II died at Balmoral, which I now learn, is in far northern Scotland. Her last journey will take her through Edinburgh, where her body will lie in state at St. Giles Cathedral.

At the cathedral a temporary sign has been posted which reads: "St. Giles will be closed for the foreseeable . . .

I remember the December 1947 day when Elizabeth and Phillip married. In Southern California, thousands of miles from London, my mother and I crouched over the Hallicrafter radio, so as to not miss a single word. We thought it quite amazing.

In a few days the entire world will be able to view the funeral by video.

Monday, September 5, 2022

Labor Day -- No Picnic in the Park

The first Labor Day was no picnic in the park. Labor Day was so declared in 1894 to appease labor, still engaged in the Pullman Railroad Strike. Workers were marching in the streets of Chicago, urging laborers still inside factories to come outside and join them in the push for an eight-hour work day. President Grover Cleveland ordered 2,000 federal troops into Chicago over the protest of Illinois Governor John Peter Altgeld. The U.S. troops were commanded by General Nelson Miles.

The newly organized American Railway Union was led by Eugene Victor Debs, who was arrested and charged under the Sherman Anti-Trust Act, which had originally been passed in 1890 by Congress to control manufacturing monopolies. Go figure.

Tuesday, July 26, 2022

I Had About Given Up

     Somehow, after I finished Sidewalk Sale Across America, I had to have a stuffed raccoon. You see, there is a raccoon in the book, a real raccoon that one of the amateur radio hams saw get hit by a car. The raccoon was taken to an animal shelter to recover.

    Cruising the internet, I found exactly what I was looking for. Sent off the order. Then I found something I was NOT looking for -- a hand-puppet racoon. That order flew off even quicker than the other. Then I waited. And waited. Eventually called the company. Spoke to a lovely lady who explained that many of their delivery orders were still on cargo ships somewhere from across the Pacific. So I waited some more.

    Six months went by. Heard nothing from the company. Accepted the fact that I was never going to have a black-banded raccoon puppet on my hands. Decided against contacting the company to cancel the order, because I was certain I had given the number of a credit card which had been transferred to a different management company, said new company causing numerous problems which had caused me to quit using the card. If the stuffed animal company issued me a credit on the card, I would despair of ever getting the money.

    Last week the letter carrier left a small package on top of my mailbox. Expecting nothing, I was puzzled. But the return address gave me the clue -- my long-awaited raccoon. The plush fur was a bit matted down from being so long in a tight package, but once freed, the fur began to fluff. Fits perfectly on my hand. But now I have another problem . . . I don't speak raccoon.

Wednesday, July 20, 2022

An Episodic Adventure

     Writing a book has been, for me at least, an episodic adventure. On scraps of paper.. Here and there.

    Joel Goldman, who wrote mysteries, maybe still does. advises to have a dead body on the first page. Then, when you are writing the middle of the book, and you get bogged down, throw in a few more dead bodies. 

    I haven't written mysteries, perhaps because I have a distaste for dead bodies, but I get equally bogged down. What I desperately need is a list of the persona. I had a list. It's somewhere in all the other scraps of notebooks, which all got bundled up into a single pile one night when a possible tornado was approaching and I took all my precious stuff that I could grab and carried down to a basement cabinet.

    Did I write my list of characters on a sheet of blue paper, or was it green? Or coral? No matter. I can find none of those colors anyway. Nor can I find the beginning. Ditto the list of chapters. Ah, me.


Saturday, July 16, 2022

Not In The Library

     It's not a banned book, but you will never find it in a library.

    Except the library at Marquette University where Daniel C. Maguire was a Professor of Ethics in the Theology Department when he wrote it twenty years ago.

    I would guess that Sacred Choices: The Right to Contraception and Abortion in Ten World Religions is out of print, but used copies  are still available through Amazon.

    About nineteen years ago I heard Daniel C. Maguire speak to a Kansas City audience. Among the questions asked at the conclusion of his talk was one about how he continued to hold onto his job at Marquette while promoting a book that appeared to be contrary to traditional Catholic dogma. His reply was to the effect that not all of the professors and the administrators at Marquette were of the same mind.

Tuesday, July 12, 2022

Presidents In A Row

     I once set myself the goal of reading a book about each United States president in a row. Began, of course, with George Washington: Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, James Madison, James Monroe, John Quincy Adams, (a remarkable individual who at age 14 was carrying out diplomatic missions for the fledgling U.S.).

    Next in line was a book about Andrew Jackson, which was more a book about John Ross, who tried to negotiate on behalf of his fellow Cherokees. Jackson left the presidency a wealthy man, which cannot be said for several other former presidents. That left me at Martin Van Buren. I gave up when I couldn't find a book about Van Buren.

    Seems I'm back at it again, but not necessarily in order. Just finished Growing Up Biden, Joe, the only president whose political campaigns were run by a sister, Valerie Biden Owens. Biden's approval ratings are plummeting, but he continues to do what he has always done -- advocate for women.

    On my way this afternoon to the library to pick up Worst. President. Ever., by Robert Strauss. And on my waiting list is A Secret Life: The Sex, Lies, and Scandals of President ???????  Should be enlightening.A Secret Life, Book

Sunday, July 10, 2022

Everyone's Doing It

     Seems that everyone is writing a book. It's so easy these days.

    Even if they have to hire a ghost.

    It's not true that everyone's got a book in them: give writing back to the writers, writes Stephanie Merritt in the Guardian.

    Well, I guess I can stay in the game -- I'm a recognized as a journalist. At least I hold a membership in SPJ -- The Society of Professional Journalists. But Stephanie has given me a good idea. With the next book I publish, I will also try to get an article in the Guardian. Wish me success.

Thursday, July 7, 2022

You Never Get to the End of a Learning Curve

 Getting back to blogposting is like starting all over again. Maybe part of it is I have a poor memory.

(Circuit overload is what it would be called by someone who is no longer in my life.)

I could never convince the SenCom group to have a class on blogs, nor have I ever found a book that was much help. Alas, maybe I will be driven to the internet for help.

I'm going to publish this -- the preview option never worked for me.