Visiting the Vietnam War Memorial, "The Wall", is tough for me. Standing in one place you can easily see the names of four boys who were important to me:
My best childhood friend David Bryant (lived right across the street from us on the corner of Donora and Spartan, moved in 4th or 5th grade. I only saw him once after they moved.) was killed on February 8, 1968.
My cousin Daniel Meade, killed the same day as David, February 8, 1968.
My good friend George Youngerman (Vandalia-Butler High School Class of '68, lived on Westhafer) was killed on April 1, 1971.
His cousin Joseph Youngerman (I didn't know him), who was killed the very next day, April 2, 1971.
It's possible to read all four names easily from the same spot.
You can touch both David and Dan's names with one hand.
A place for stories about my family, friends and me. There are also jokes, observations, thoughts I have, memories and ideas I wish to share with my two wonderful sons, James & John.
Wednesday, May 18, 2011
Saturday, May 7, 2011
Hiroshima & Nagasaki
The bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki have been controversial almost since the moment they occurred. Some interesting thoughts on these acts are at the following pages.
Very interesting discussion here too, scroll down.
The Value of Work
The job everyone looks down on is "burger flipping" -- working in a fast food restaurant. But, as Theodore Dalrymple once said "There is nothing dishonourable or dishonest about stacking shelves. On the contrary, it is a socially useful thing to do."
There a many useful things a young person learns in such a job -- being on time, following directions, being neat and presentable, respecting customers and your coworkers, etc. Many have gotten their starts in work life in these types of jobs.
It does our society no good to denigrate any work, no matter how seemingly menial.
Friday, April 29, 2011
Some Notable People I Have Met
I already talked about my Olympic-medal winning friend Putzi Crotty, but I’ve also met a number of other notable people.
Jill St. John was the first celebrity I ever saw in person (I had seen President Johnson drive by in a limousine). It was in Aspen, Colorado in 1971. This was just after she had finished filming Diamonds Are Forever, a James Bond movie. She would have been about 31.
She was on the sundeck at a mid-mountain restaurant, I think it was called Bonnie’s. I was with Jim Brenneman and some friends of his from Ohio State. Several people pointed St. John out to me, otherwise I don’t think that I’d have recognized her. I was about 15 or 20 feet away from her and I remember thinking that she really wasn’t that pretty. She was wearing quite a bit of zinc oxide (a white cream which stops ultraviolet rays) and it was somewhat blotchy. There were lots of other young women there who I would have said were more attractive. Shows you how photographic lighting and makeup affects perceptions.
Anyhow, there were a lot of people there and no one was paying any attention to her. Aspen has a kind of snobby atmosphere and I suspect that no one wanted anyone else to think they were impressed by a movie star’s presence.
I was hungry and got in line to buy some food. As I was waiting, someone said, “Excuse me.” as they wanted to get by the spot where I was standing. I moved aside to let the person pass -- it was St. John. That was the extent of our acquaintanceship.
************************
In 1988 I was teaching skiing at NorthStar near Lake Tahoe.
One student that I had for several days was the wife of William Katt, an actor most well known for The Greatest American Hero TV show.
I spoke briefly to him several times when his wife and I crossed his path. He was very friendly and talkative, although I can’t remember anything that we discussed.
**********************
Bill Hewlett, of Hewlett-Packard fame, had a “cabin” in the Sierras near Donner Pass. It was in an area known as “The Cedars” which is about due south of Sugar Bowl ski area. This is a collection of very nice summer cabins (it is almost impossible to get into the place in the winter), most of which are owned by pretty well-to-do families from the Bay Area.
An example of the wealth of these families -- there is a large meadow in “The Cedars” which we were using a base to land a helicopter in to shuttle firemen into a small, inaccessible fire nearby. There were a number of pre-teen boys watching our operations and I said to one, “Kind of exciting watching a helicopter land in your front yard, isn’t it?”
He replied, “Yeah, it’s neat. I always like it when my Dad’s helicopter lands at our house to take him somewhere.”
Anyhow, in 1992 they became concerned about their vulnerability to a forest fire and asked the Forest Service to help them devise a plan to minimize the potential for damage. I worked with them to develop some plans to control the vegetation around the community, minimize the potential for fire starts and develop some sort of fire response plan.
Bill came to many of the meetings we held and was very interested and involved in the process. I got to know him pretty well and found him very affable with a gentle sense of humor. He did not in any way try to be the "leader," he seemed happy just to be one of the participants.
***********************
In the spring of 1974 I was living in New Mexico and some of my Ohio friends came out to visit me. We went on a ski trip up to Colorado. One night after skiing in Vail we went to a restaurant, the Blue Gnu, which had been one of my friends favorite places when he lived in Vail a few years before. It wasn't really my kind of place, kind of noisy and dimly lit, and I was only there to be with my friends. I was quickly bored and would have been ready to leave at anytime.
I had noticed one young lady sitting in a booth near the dance floor. I thought she looked very fit and was pretty with very long, dark hair.
We hadn't been in the place for long when, on my way to the restroom, the young woman I had noticed earlier was standing along the railing overlooking the dance floor. As I passed her she suddenly stepped back and knocked into me. She spilled some of her drink and I caught her to prevent her from losing her balance. She smiled at me after I let go of her. We exchanged short pleasantries and I went on my way. She thanked me in English, but she had a strong French accent.
Then I returned to my friends and she went back and sat in a booth. I noticed that an occupant of the booth was the guy she had been talking with just before I asked her to dance.
A little later, my friend Jim, who was a big fan of ski racing, pointed to her and asked me if I knew who she was. I did not. He told me that it was Fabienne Serrat, a French racer who had won two gold medals at the World Ski Championship in St. Moritz, Switzerland just a few weeks earlier.
Jim also added that the guy she was sitting with was Piero Gros, an Italian racer who would win the overall World Cup skiing championship that season.
*******************
In April of 1974 I started working for the Forest Service. I was assigned to fire prevention and visitor information services. My duty station was at the top station of the Sandia Peak Tramway, just outside of Albuquerque.
Our job was to greet each tram as it arrived and explain to the riders the very high fire danger in the area, urge them to be fire-safe while visiting and then to answer any questions that they might have about the area.
One time when the tram arrived Lou Rawls, a well-known singer and sometime actor, was aboard. I recognized him immediately as I prepared to give my little fire danger spiel.
After he exited the tram, it was obvious that he under the influence of something, but he asked a couple of question about what was visible from our vantage point near the top of the mountain. I think this was more out of courtesy than curiosity. Two attractive young ladies accompanied him, but they both treated him more like they were nurses or caretakers than girlfriends.
The thing that I most remember about Rawls is that he was the actor who said the memorable line, “Ain't a horse that can't be rode; ain't a man that can't be throwed.” This was on the TV show The Big Valley when he had a guest starring role as a hired hand. I also remember that he was a talented singer with a very silky voice.
**********************
In May of 1983 I attended a US Ski Coaches seminar at Mount Bachelor, Oregon. We stayed at the Inn of the Seventh Mountain lodge in Bend. The US Ski Team was training there at the same time and during the course of the 10 days we were there I met a number of famous skiers, although some of them weren’t known at all yet.
Bill Johnson was the first American male skier to win an Olympic Gold medal – for the downhill in 1984 at Sarajevo, less than a year after I met him. He was at the camp and I rode the lift with him a couple of times. He told me that he didn’t expect to ever win the overall World Cup as he planned to specialize in downhill only and not really train for slalom or GS. He said, “I just like to go fast, I don’t want to turn.”
************************
Kim Reichhelm really isn’t that famous. She’s a very good skier, who raced for the University of Colorado and then had a couple of seasons on the US Ski Team. I don’t think that she ever had any top results in international competition. She was one of the people I met at Mount Bachelor.
I ran into her again a few years later in Colorado and skied about a half day with her. She now runs a private company which specializes in taking women to various exotic ski destinations.
She briefly attained some notoriety back in 1989 when she participated in a skiing film called, License to Thrill. During one “extreme skiing run” that was filmed for the movie, she took a horrendous, spectacular fall, every moment of which was caught on film.
Although she wasn’t badly hurt, the film clip was so fascinating and eye-catching that it was aired on numerous TV programs and she got a guest spot on the David Letterman Show.
********************
Phil & Steve Mahre are twin brothers from Washington who were very successful American racers in the 1970’s and 80’s. Phil won the overall World Cup several times and they both won Olympic and World Championship medals. Until Bode Miller came along, I think Phil was the most successful American skier ever.
Phil and Steve were both at the camp, but they also had their wives with them and Steve had at least one child, so they weren’t hanging out with the coaches like some of the other athletes were. I did talk to both of them quite a bit during the week, including playing a couple of games of basketball against them. They were both about my height, 5-9, but they were maybe 30 pounds heavier and all muscle. Trying to guard them was like guarding a moving rock. They were both really muscularly built.
They were quick players with excellent reflexes and good shots. Some of the other coaches (many of who were excellent athletes in their own rights) were probably better basketball players, but the Mahre’s were very, very good.
*********************
Also staying at the Inn of the Seventh Mountain lodge were the cast and crew of a movie which was being filmed in the area at the same time. The "Stars" were all staying in houses they had rented so we never saw any of them, but most of the other cast members were at our lodge and we saw them often. The movie was called Up the Creek and was about a college rafting race. It was a goofy youth comedy like Animal House or Nerds.
I, and several of my fellow coaches, met one of these "lower-billed" actors, Jeana Tomasino, one afternoon. She was quite pretty. I don't remember much of the conversation, which the other guys dominated, but I remember that she seemed very shy, and I think that she told us that she was scared of skiing.
*************************
In 1985 I had gone down to LA with some friends for a Bruce Springsteen Concert. The following night the sister of my friend Jim, and a bunch of her friends, all of who had gone to college nearby, wanted to go to a restaurant/bar in Santa Monica, called the Oar House, which they had frequented during their college years. I’m sure this was October 1, 1985, because I know the concert was September 30. Bill Schofield was also with us.
The restaurant had a small dance floor, and wasn’t crowded. Our party made up more than half the people. After eating we went over by the dance floor as the women we were with all wanted to dance. We hadn’t been there very long when a group of very attractive, and obviously very fit, young women came in.
A few years later, in 1987, an album by a new young singer became popular, Forever Your Girl. It was the woman we had met back in 1985 - Paula Abdul.
Bill and Jim also both danced with her, but Bill (who imbibed more than one adult beverage that night) doesn't remember this. Haven't spoken to Jim about it.
**************************
In the winter of 1986 I was teaching skiing in Mammoth. One of my co-workers, his first name was Chris, introduced us to his neighbor, who, he told us, had acted in a few TV shows and movies.
Her name was Dona Speir and she was early in a career as a “B” movie actress. I don’t think that she ever became well-known, but she was in movies and TV for about 10 years or so.
I should add that, like Jill St. John, she looked a lot better on the screen than in real life. She was attractive, but I would not call her a "head-turner."
***********************
I’ve known Eva Twardokens, a US Ski Team member who participated in the Olympics and won a medal at the 1985 World Championship, since she was a little girl. Her Dad, George, was a ski instructor who was one of the Far West Ski Instructors Association specialists on ski teaching. I knew him through this and later worked with him at Alpine Meadows. I also occasionally ran into him on the U of Nevada campus where he was a Kinesiology professor.
When he traveled around California helping instructors he would sometimes bring Eva so I skied with her a few times when she was small. All the instructors were like big brothers to her and would all take turns keeping an eye on her. When I knew her then she was more into trick skiing or freestyle, but she later got serious about racing competition.
She was also at the Mount Bachelor session in 1983 for a day or two.
*******************
When I moved to Truckee in 1986 I seemed to see Tamara McKinney, another US Ski Team member every time I went out to eat. She won the overall World Cup a couple of times and also won World Championship medals and participated in the Olympics. I only knew her to say hello, but our paths did cross a lot.
*******************
For other notable people I have met, click this link.
*******************
Jill St. John was the first celebrity I ever saw in person (I had seen President Johnson drive by in a limousine). It was in Aspen, Colorado in 1971. This was just after she had finished filming Diamonds Are Forever, a James Bond movie. She would have been about 31.
![]() |
| Jill St. John |
Anyhow, there were a lot of people there and no one was paying any attention to her. Aspen has a kind of snobby atmosphere and I suspect that no one wanted anyone else to think they were impressed by a movie star’s presence.
I was hungry and got in line to buy some food. As I was waiting, someone said, “Excuse me.” as they wanted to get by the spot where I was standing. I moved aside to let the person pass -- it was St. John. That was the extent of our acquaintanceship.
************************
In 1988 I was teaching skiing at NorthStar near Lake Tahoe.
![]() |
| William Katt |
I spoke briefly to him several times when his wife and I crossed his path. He was very friendly and talkative, although I can’t remember anything that we discussed.
**********************
Bill Hewlett, of Hewlett-Packard fame, had a “cabin” in the Sierras near Donner Pass. It was in an area known as “The Cedars” which is about due south of Sugar Bowl ski area. This is a collection of very nice summer cabins (it is almost impossible to get into the place in the winter), most of which are owned by pretty well-to-do families from the Bay Area.
An example of the wealth of these families -- there is a large meadow in “The Cedars” which we were using a base to land a helicopter in to shuttle firemen into a small, inaccessible fire nearby. There were a number of pre-teen boys watching our operations and I said to one, “Kind of exciting watching a helicopter land in your front yard, isn’t it?”
He replied, “Yeah, it’s neat. I always like it when my Dad’s helicopter lands at our house to take him somewhere.”
![]() |
| Bill Hewlett |
Bill came to many of the meetings we held and was very interested and involved in the process. I got to know him pretty well and found him very affable with a gentle sense of humor. He did not in any way try to be the "leader," he seemed happy just to be one of the participants.
***********************
In the spring of 1974 I was living in New Mexico and some of my Ohio friends came out to visit me. We went on a ski trip up to Colorado. One night after skiing in Vail we went to a restaurant, the Blue Gnu, which had been one of my friends favorite places when he lived in Vail a few years before. It wasn't really my kind of place, kind of noisy and dimly lit, and I was only there to be with my friends. I was quickly bored and would have been ready to leave at anytime.
I had noticed one young lady sitting in a booth near the dance floor. I thought she looked very fit and was pretty with very long, dark hair.
We hadn't been in the place for long when, on my way to the restroom, the young woman I had noticed earlier was standing along the railing overlooking the dance floor. As I passed her she suddenly stepped back and knocked into me. She spilled some of her drink and I caught her to prevent her from losing her balance. She smiled at me after I let go of her. We exchanged short pleasantries and I went on my way. She thanked me in English, but she had a strong French accent.
![]() |
| Fabienne Serrat |
As I returned from the restroom I saw her from across the room. A guy was talking to her and she shook her head at him several times. By the time I got near her he had left. She looked towards me as I approached and I impulsively asked her to dance (very unusual for me). She agreed and we danced to a couple of tunes, probably less than five minutes. We hardly spoke, as it was quite loud. I'm pretty sure that my friends never even noticed this - I didn't mention it and they never commented about it.
Then I returned to my friends and she went back and sat in a booth. I noticed that an occupant of the booth was the guy she had been talking with just before I asked her to dance.
A little later, my friend Jim, who was a big fan of ski racing, pointed to her and asked me if I knew who she was. I did not. He told me that it was Fabienne Serrat, a French racer who had won two gold medals at the World Ski Championship in St. Moritz, Switzerland just a few weeks earlier.
Jim also added that the guy she was sitting with was Piero Gros, an Italian racer who would win the overall World Cup skiing championship that season.
*******************
In April of 1974 I started working for the Forest Service. I was assigned to fire prevention and visitor information services. My duty station was at the top station of the Sandia Peak Tramway, just outside of Albuquerque.
Our job was to greet each tram as it arrived and explain to the riders the very high fire danger in the area, urge them to be fire-safe while visiting and then to answer any questions that they might have about the area.
One time when the tram arrived Lou Rawls, a well-known singer and sometime actor, was aboard. I recognized him immediately as I prepared to give my little fire danger spiel.
![]() |
| Lou Rawls |
The thing that I most remember about Rawls is that he was the actor who said the memorable line, “Ain't a horse that can't be rode; ain't a man that can't be throwed.” This was on the TV show The Big Valley when he had a guest starring role as a hired hand. I also remember that he was a talented singer with a very silky voice.
**********************
In May of 1983 I attended a US Ski Coaches seminar at Mount Bachelor, Oregon. We stayed at the Inn of the Seventh Mountain lodge in Bend. The US Ski Team was training there at the same time and during the course of the 10 days we were there I met a number of famous skiers, although some of them weren’t known at all yet.
![]() |
| Bill Johnson |
************************
Kim Reichhelm really isn’t that famous. She’s a very good skier, who raced for the University of Colorado and then had a couple of seasons on the US Ski Team. I don’t think that she ever had any top results in international competition. She was one of the people I met at Mount Bachelor.
I ran into her again a few years later in Colorado and skied about a half day with her. She now runs a private company which specializes in taking women to various exotic ski destinations.
![]() |
| Kim Reichhelm |
Although she wasn’t badly hurt, the film clip was so fascinating and eye-catching that it was aired on numerous TV programs and she got a guest spot on the David Letterman Show.
********************
Phil & Steve Mahre are twin brothers from Washington who were very successful American racers in the 1970’s and 80’s. Phil won the overall World Cup several times and they both won Olympic and World Championship medals. Until Bode Miller came along, I think Phil was the most successful American skier ever.
Phil and Steve were both at the camp, but they also had their wives with them and Steve had at least one child, so they weren’t hanging out with the coaches like some of the other athletes were. I did talk to both of them quite a bit during the week, including playing a couple of games of basketball against them. They were both about my height, 5-9, but they were maybe 30 pounds heavier and all muscle. Trying to guard them was like guarding a moving rock. They were both really muscularly built.
![]() |
| Phil & Steve Mahre |
*********************
Also staying at the Inn of the Seventh Mountain lodge were the cast and crew of a movie which was being filmed in the area at the same time. The "Stars" were all staying in houses they had rented so we never saw any of them, but most of the other cast members were at our lodge and we saw them often. The movie was called Up the Creek and was about a college rafting race. It was a goofy youth comedy like Animal House or Nerds.
![]() |
| Jeana Tomasino |
*************************
In 1985 I had gone down to LA with some friends for a Bruce Springsteen Concert. The following night the sister of my friend Jim, and a bunch of her friends, all of who had gone to college nearby, wanted to go to a restaurant/bar in Santa Monica, called the Oar House, which they had frequented during their college years. I’m sure this was October 1, 1985, because I know the concert was September 30. Bill Schofield was also with us.
The restaurant had a small dance floor, and wasn’t crowded. Our party made up more than half the people. After eating we went over by the dance floor as the women we were with all wanted to dance. We hadn’t been there very long when a group of very attractive, and obviously very fit, young women came in.
![]() |
| Paula Abdul |
There were probably about twice as many women as men in the place, so the ladies kept us guys steadily occupied as dance partners. The women who had just come in were incredible dancers. I noticed one in particular, who was a bit shorter and a little stockier than the rest of her group, but whose movements were somehow more fluid, dynamic and eye-catching than the others. I spoke with her and found out that her name was Paula. As the evening went on we got to know all of them and found out that about half their group were Laker Girls, the cheerleaders for the LA Lakers NBA team.
Bill and Jim also both danced with her, but Bill (who imbibed more than one adult beverage that night) doesn't remember this. Haven't spoken to Jim about it.
**************************
In the winter of 1986 I was teaching skiing in Mammoth. One of my co-workers, his first name was Chris, introduced us to his neighbor, who, he told us, had acted in a few TV shows and movies.
Her name was Dona Speir and she was early in a career as a “B” movie actress. I don’t think that she ever became well-known, but she was in movies and TV for about 10 years or so.
![]() |
| Dona Speir |
***********************
I’ve known Eva Twardokens, a US Ski Team member who participated in the Olympics and won a medal at the 1985 World Championship, since she was a little girl. Her Dad, George, was a ski instructor who was one of the Far West Ski Instructors Association specialists on ski teaching. I knew him through this and later worked with him at Alpine Meadows. I also occasionally ran into him on the U of Nevada campus where he was a Kinesiology professor.
![]() |
| Eva Twardokens |
She was also at the Mount Bachelor session in 1983 for a day or two.
*******************
![]() |
| Tamara McKinney |
*******************
For other notable people I have met, click this link.
*******************
My “Famous” Friend
I've met a few celebrities, but the only one I would call a friend is Putzi Crotty. Putzi (a nickname, her real name is Josefina) was a famous Austrian ski racer who won Olympic and World Championship medals in the 1950’s (her maiden name is Frandl). Visiting her home was quite interesting as there were ski trophies and medals strewn around the house.
Putzi and I became friends because we were co-workers on the Ski School at Copper Mountain ski resort in 1984-85. It was the first season working there for both of us and we ended up talking and discovered that we had mutual friends. Putzi had also taught at Mad River Mountain (Valley High) near Bellefontaine, Ohio, which is where I had learned to ski and first became a ski instructor. Later that ski season some of our Mad River friends visited us at Copper.
Putzi told me that after retiring from racing she worked as a ski instructor in Austria. In one of her classes she met US Air Force officer Patrick Crotty. They eventually married and had three children, Monica, Patrick Jr. and Joseph. I got to know the boys pretty well as they often came up to Copper to ski.
Patrick's Air Force career took them to many places, and whenever there was a ski resort close enough Putzi would teach skiing. I only worked that one season at Copper, but Putzi worked there from 1984 until the 2008-2009 season after which she decided to concentrate on her "second love", tennis during 2009-2010. She lives in Centennial, Colorado now.
Here’s a bit about her competition history and some stories she told me. In the 1956 Winter Olympics she won the silver medal in the giant slalom event. In the slalom competition she finished fifth and had a 13th place finish in the downhill contest.
Putzi told me an interesting thing about the winner of the GS, Ossi Reichert. Reichert had seriously injured an ankle in 1954, and was not expected to do well at these games. She also drew the #1 start position for the one-run event. Putzi told me that, "Ossi was disappointed to draw #1 as that was usually not a good position. The first racer down the course usually has to scrape off a bit of snow, which slows you down. But Ossi had a great run and overcame that difficulty."
Four years later, at Squaw Valley, California 1960 Winter Olympics, Putzi finished 16th in the slalom event, 21st in the giant slalom competition, and 39th in the downhill contest.
Putzi told me that she was pretty disappointed in her results in Squaw. She felt that she had been skiing very well in the events leading up to the Olympics and expected to do well. There was very little snow in the Sierras until just before the Olympics. Finally the area received a good snowfall, just in time to keep the events from being cancelled or postponed.
Putzi and some of her friends and teammates went out to ski the fresh powder snow. Unfortunately, while coming down one run, the tip of one of her skis went under a log hidden just beneath the newly fallen snow. Her shin hit the log hard, scraping it and straining her leg. She told me that she believed that the injury possibly prevented her from winning another Olympic Medal.
Putzi also had excellent results at the 1958 World Championships, with a Silver in Slalom and Bronze in the Combined.
*******************
For other notable people I have met, click this link.
*******************
*******************
For other notable people I have met, click this link.
*******************
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Unions
Written in March 2011 during the Wisconsin Union Protests.
No doubt that part of the reason Republicans are pushing these union-related policy changes is to solidify and/or increase their power. No doubt part of the reason the Democrats initially imposed these policies and now resist changing them is a desire to maintain and/or increase their power.
The question we need to ask ourselves is: Which policies will produce a decent future for us and our children/grandchildren?
I think we have to make drastic financial changes. We can't deficit spend forever. We can no longer allow politicians to pay off their supporters with the public purse.
Why are so many of us worked up about the US financial situation? Maybe this will help explain why many feel urgency is necessary:
Imagine that a family yearly income was $50,000 and:
The family currently owes various entities $335,700 (some of whom don't support their values).
The family plans to spend $89,300 this year (adding another $39,300 to their debt).
One spouse suggests modifying this plan to spend $1,430 less ($87,870 - adding another $37,870 to the debt).
The other spouse believes that is way too much and only wants to cut $155 this year ($89,145 - adding another $89,145 to the debt).
Should this family be worried about the predicament it's gotten itself into?
OK, back to unions. Denying collective bargaining rights to some classes of public workers, or allowing municipalities to do so isn’t unprecedented—18 states currently do so, as does the Federal Government. Virginia and North Carolina have outright bans on public sector collective bargaining. And nearly every state has some sort of restrictions on the scope of collective bargaining – for example, in New York, pension benefits are an excluded subject from collective bargaining.
I'm currently a union member, and I have been one for most of my working life since I got my first job at GM in 1968. Speaking from my personal experience at GM, the union (UAW) killed the American auto industry. No one in the entire factory ever worked more than about 70% or 80% of the day. The final hour and a half or two hours of every shift were spent hanging around, reading, BSing, playing cards, drinking coffee and complaining about Japanese cars. When I first started, I tried to work all day. My co-workers sabotaged my equipment, put parts into bins instead of onto the conveyer lines to slow me down and physically threatened me. The UAW supported and defended these actions.
I gave up – I knew I wasn’t going to work there long -- I was going to college at the same time -- so I just did my quota each day and spent the rest of the shift studying.
Another incident that turned me against unions happened when I lived in Shaver Lake, California, about an hour outside Fresno in the Sierra Nevada Mountains. An acquaintance of mine had been making a decent living building, with the help of a few friends, a "spec house" or two a year. He never intended to live in them, and he wasn't building them for anyone in particular. He'd build a house, put it up for sale and use the profits to live off while he built the next one.
He did OK. Eventually, he got his General Contractor's license. Sometime after this, he had an opportunity to put in a fairly large number of homes on about 40 acres of land. He was going to do the whole job, roads, water system, underground utilities, etc. He bought some expensive equipment to do some of this, bulldozer, road grader and, I think, an excavator or large backhoe.
At that time, Shaver Lake was a small community, with no active union presence. When the union guys down in Fresno heard about this project they started pressuring him to hire union guys. He wanted to hire locals who he knew and trusted, people who'd worked for him before. None of them were union members, and didn't have union "certification".
Eventually the union thugs came up to the work site one night and vandalized the place. The wrecked some of the equipment on site (sugar, etc in the fuel, slashed tires, broken glass) stole a lot of things, drove the grader off a cliff and ruined some of the work in progress.
As for the other unions I’ve belonged to, they seemed to exist solely to collect dues. I can’t see that they do anything to improve anyone’s work situation. And they use the dues to support politicians pushing policies I vehemently oppose like abortion, deficit spending, illegal immigration, affirmative action, gun control, corporate bailouts, and on and on.
Tuesday, February 8, 2011
Places I've Lived
I think this list is pretty complete. Some of these places I was only in for a few months, and others for many years.
1826 Carlton Street Charleston, South Carolina
Latitude 32.855524 Longitude -79.966847
88 & 90 Air Street Dayton, Ohio
Latitude 39.773784 Longitude -84.171956
Latitude 39.773784 Longitude -84.171956
11 Rita Street Dayton, Ohio
Latitude 39.776313 Longitude -84.167765
Latitude 39.776313 Longitude -84.167765
331 Hickory Street Dayton, Ohio
Latitude 39.750750 Longitude -84.181834
Latitude 39.750750 Longitude -84.181834
751 Spartan Avenue Vandalia, Ohio
Latitude 39.897148 Longitude -84.184964
Latitude 39.897148 Longitude -84.184964
495 Stonequarry Road Vandalia, Ohio (this residence also used the addresses 3787 and RR2 Box 108)
Latitude 39.872024 Longitude -84.206937
Latitude 39.872024 Longitude -84.206937
1262 Snow Valley Road Zanesfield, Ohio
Latitude 40.318913 Longitude -83.674055
Latitude 40.318913 Longitude -83.674055
1200 Redwing Place SE Albuquerque, New Mexico
Latitude 35.062297 Longitude -106.596430
Latitude 35.062297 Longitude -106.596430
437 Grove Street SE Albuquerque, New Mexico
Latitude 35.069401 Longitude -106.562511
Latitude 35.069401 Longitude -106.562511
3113 Morris Street NE Albuquerque, New Mexico
Latitude 35.118348 Longitude -106.524768
Latitude 35.118348 Longitude -106.524768
200 Vassar Drive SE Albuquerque, New Mexico
Latitude 35.079005 Longitude -106.614333
Latitude 35.079005 Longitude -106.614333
Casa Vieja Guard Station Inyo National Forest Tulare County, California
Latitude 36.201968 Longitude -118.268799
Latitude 36.201968 Longitude -118.268799
210 Margarita Avenue San Luis Obispo, California
Latitude 35.257141 Longitude -120.667785
Latitude 35.257141 Longitude -120.667785
17 Villa Court San Luis Obispo, California
Latitude 35.243121 Longitude -120.677116
Latitude 35.243121 Longitude -120.677116
Latitude 35.254247 Longitude -120.684766
59265 California Hwy 168 Lakeshore, California
Latitude 37.235638 Longitude -119.156673
41810 Toyon Lane Shaver Lake, California
Latitude 37.107126 Longitude -119.320008
Monache Guard Station Inyo National Forest Tulare County, California
Latitude 36.216175 Longitude -118.193394
Latitude 36.216175 Longitude -118.193394
865 Walnut Street San Luis Obispo, California
Latitude 35.283986 Longitude -120.665441
Latitude 35.283986 Longitude -120.665441
41950 Foxtail Lane Shaver Lake, California
Latitude 37.108624 Longitude -119.319525
41924 Huntington Lake Road Shaver Lake, California
Latitude 37.108905 Longitude -119.319363
Latitude 37.108624 Longitude -119.319525
41924 Huntington Lake Road Shaver Lake, California
Latitude 37.108905 Longitude -119.319363
41692 Chipmunk Lane Auberry, California
Latitude 37.079148 Longitude -119.429545
Latitude 37.079148 Longitude -119.429545
Latitude 37.753371 Longitude -118.983157
Ediza & Ritter (NE corner) Mammoth Lakes, California
Mammoth Ranger District Mobile Home Housing
Mammoth Ranger District Mobile Home Housing
Latitude 37.647919 Longitude -118.965776
8th Avenue & Teller Street Frisco, Colorado
8th Avenue & Teller Street Frisco, Colorado
Latitude 39.574433 Longitude -106.091583
10181 Indian Jack Road Truckee, California
Latitude 39.331724 Longitude -120.190300
15562 Waterloo Circle Truckee, California
Latitude 39.354411 Longitude -120.100710
Latitude 39.354411 Longitude -120.100710
44 Nevada Road Rovana, California
Latitude 37.414569 Longitude -118.610636
Latitude 37.414569 Longitude -118.610636
1521 Lazy A Drive Bishop, California
Latitude 37.381079 Longitude -118.421597
4 Ascot Pkwy Vallejo, California
Latitude 38.112190 Longitude -122.196142
192 Xining South Road Taipai, Taiwan
Latitude 25.040273 Longitude 121.505998
Latitude 37.381079 Longitude -118.421597
4 Ascot Pkwy Vallejo, California
Latitude 38.112190 Longitude -122.196142
192 Xining South Road Taipai, Taiwan
Latitude 25.040273 Longitude 121.505998
119 Terrill Loop Mullan, Idaho
Latitude 47.4701969 Longitude -115.8020916,92
Current Home
Some of the actual buildings I lived in are gone and/or the roads, etc, changed and the area looks a lot different.
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