Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Symbol
Fascinating. How symbols are used as logos and trademark, around the world. Saw on HW new book cart, 1/11/12
Saturday, January 21, 2012
Collision course
McCartin, Joseph A.Collision course: Ronald Reagan, the air traffic controllers, and the strike that changed America. New York : Oxford University Press.
A patron asked for this book today. This is a chapter of modern American history that I have forgotten about, and reading a review of the book reminds me of its importance.
On the 30th anniversary of the showdown between Ronald Reagan and the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), McCartin revisits the most consequential labor dispute since the New Deal. As a two-time governor of California, Ronald Reagan regularly bargained with public-service employees and, as president (the only one in American history ever to have helmed a union), he offered PATCO, one of the few labor organizations to endorse his candidacy, an unprecedented contract in 1981. When PATCO rejected the proposal and called an illegal strike, Reagan issued a 48 hour return-to-work ultimatum. He ended up firing the vast majority of the more than 10,000 highly specialized controllers, destroyed PATCO and set a precedent that continues to reverberate. An expert on the labor movement, McCartin reviews the origins and evolution of public-sector unions—once universally decried, even by iconic liberal presidents—outlines and translates for the general reader the applicable laws and delivers a detailed history of PATCO from its 1968 founding to its demise. Demonstrating a thorough understanding of PATCO's culture, the author powerfully describes the high-pressure world of air-traffic control, examines the historically contentious relations between the controllers and the hidebound FAA and charts PATCO's increasing militancy, even as a powerful anti-union backlash gathered in the country. Although his union sympathies are clear, McCartin, for the most part, plays it straight, relying on extensive interviews with government and union officials, rank-and-file members, pilots, airline executives and politicians to get the full story behind this dramatic confrontation. Breaking the strike proved more expensive to the federal government than meeting the controllers' demands. But the chilling effect of Reagan's swift dismissal of seemingly indispensable workers has proven more costly to organized labor. With the collective-bargaining power of public employees under fierce assault, McCartin's story couldn't be timelier or more important.
As so much else about and in today's GOP, the impetus and inspiration of today's Republican party comes from Ronald Reagan. But, I contend, not from the Gipper himself, but from how today's Republicans (choose to) see him.
Perhaps Reagan himself would prove to be too moderate for today's right wingers. Notice that President Reagan first proposed an unprecedented contract, and only then moved to crush the union. O, there is no mistaking that Reagan was ruthless, hard-assed, and started the right-wing counter-revolution; I am under no such illusions. But he would compromise, he would negotiate, and he would even joke and socialize with his archnemesis, Tip O'Neill.
I simply can not imagine Obama and Boehner doing this, enjoying each other this much.
A patron asked for this book today. This is a chapter of modern American history that I have forgotten about, and reading a review of the book reminds me of its importance.
On the 30th anniversary of the showdown between Ronald Reagan and the Professional Air Traffic Controllers Organization (PATCO), McCartin revisits the most consequential labor dispute since the New Deal. As a two-time governor of California, Ronald Reagan regularly bargained with public-service employees and, as president (the only one in American history ever to have helmed a union), he offered PATCO, one of the few labor organizations to endorse his candidacy, an unprecedented contract in 1981. When PATCO rejected the proposal and called an illegal strike, Reagan issued a 48 hour return-to-work ultimatum. He ended up firing the vast majority of the more than 10,000 highly specialized controllers, destroyed PATCO and set a precedent that continues to reverberate. An expert on the labor movement, McCartin reviews the origins and evolution of public-sector unions—once universally decried, even by iconic liberal presidents—outlines and translates for the general reader the applicable laws and delivers a detailed history of PATCO from its 1968 founding to its demise. Demonstrating a thorough understanding of PATCO's culture, the author powerfully describes the high-pressure world of air-traffic control, examines the historically contentious relations between the controllers and the hidebound FAA and charts PATCO's increasing militancy, even as a powerful anti-union backlash gathered in the country. Although his union sympathies are clear, McCartin, for the most part, plays it straight, relying on extensive interviews with government and union officials, rank-and-file members, pilots, airline executives and politicians to get the full story behind this dramatic confrontation. Breaking the strike proved more expensive to the federal government than meeting the controllers' demands. But the chilling effect of Reagan's swift dismissal of seemingly indispensable workers has proven more costly to organized labor. With the collective-bargaining power of public employees under fierce assault, McCartin's story couldn't be timelier or more important.
As so much else about and in today's GOP, the impetus and inspiration of today's Republican party comes from Ronald Reagan. But, I contend, not from the Gipper himself, but from how today's Republicans (choose to) see him.
Perhaps Reagan himself would prove to be too moderate for today's right wingers. Notice that President Reagan first proposed an unprecedented contract, and only then moved to crush the union. O, there is no mistaking that Reagan was ruthless, hard-assed, and started the right-wing counter-revolution; I am under no such illusions. But he would compromise, he would negotiate, and he would even joke and socialize with his archnemesis, Tip O'Neill.
I simply can not imagine Obama and Boehner doing this, enjoying each other this much.
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
Sunday, January 1, 2012
Barcelona, 1945
(2004). New York; Penguin. Carlos Ruiz Zafón. Lucia Graves (translator).
Kirkus: The histories of a mysterious book and its enigmatic author are painstakingly disentangled in this yeasty Dickensian romance: a first novel by a Spanish novelist now living in the US.We meet its engaging narrator Daniel Sempere in 1945, when he's an 11-year-old boy brought by his father, a Barcelona rare-book dealer, to a secret library known as the Cemetery of Forgotten Books. Enthralled, Daniel "chooses" an obscure novel, The Shadow of the Wind, a complex quest tale whose author, Julian Carax, reputedly fled Spain at the outbreak of its Civil War, and later died in Paris. Carax and his book obsess Daniel for a decade, as he grows to manhood, falls in and out of fascination, if not love with three beguiling women, and comes ever closer to understanding who Carax was and how he was connected to the family of tyrannical Don Ricardo Aldaya-and why a sinister, "faceless" stranger who identifies himself as Carax's fictional creation ("demonic") "Lain Coubert" has seemingly "got out of the pages of a book so that he could burn it." Daniel's investigations are aided, and sometimes impeded, by a lively gallery of vividly evoked supporting characters. Prominent among them are secretive translator Nuria Monfort (who knows more about Carax's Paris years than she initially reveals); Aldaya family maid Jacinta Coronada, consigned to a lunatic asylum to conceal what she knows; Daniel's ebullient Sancho Panza Fermin Romero de Torres, a wily vagrant working as "bibliographic detective" in the Semperes' bookstore; and vengeful police inspector Fumero, a Javert-like stalker whose refusal to believe Carax is dead precipitates the climax-at which Daniel realizes he's much more than just a reader of Carax's intricate, sorrowful story.The Shadow of the Wind will keep you up nights-and it'll be time well spent. Absolutely marvelous.
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