April is National Poetry Month.
Two poem recently caught my attention because they came from unique sources.
The first is "Anonymous Is Coyote Girl" (2000) by Anita Endrezze. It uses a newspaper article to provide the background for her poem.
(Excerpt)
From a newspaper photo and article about my godfather, James Moreno, East Los Angeles, 1950.
(Three police officers took a brutal beating in a wild free-for-all with a
family, including three young girls.
From left, James, 19, and Alex, 22, in jail after the fracas
on the porch of their home at 3307 Hunter.)
Jimmy is staring off the page, hands in his pockets.
A four-button dark shirt. No bruises,
but he looks dazed.
Alex wears a leather coat and a polka-dot shirt,
which is in itself a crime.
Nowhere is there a photo of a young girl
with a face carved like a racetrack saint,
eyes with all bets called off,
grinning like a coyote.
The second is "The Hill Yoncalla" (1999) by Ursula K. Le Guin. It uses letters from a pioneer who was on the trail to Oregon in 1843. The footnote for the poem states: "All word of this poem are take from 'The Letters of Roselle Putnam,' edited by Sheba Hargreave, Oregon Historical Quarterly 24, no. 3 (1928)."
(Excerpt)
Yoncalla is not a town nor a place of man's creation
nor of white man's naming
but it is a hill round and high and beautiful
I can get five pounds of dried peaches
for one pound of butter
the nearest neighbor is three miles off
our little cabin quite a comfortable little place
Link to "Anonymous Is Coyote Girl": http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/238976
Reference for "The Hill Yoncalla": Ursula K. Le Guin, Sixty Odd: New Poems (Boston, Shambhalal Publications, 1999), pp. 39-41.
Monday, April 29, 2013
Saturday, April 13, 2013
Jackie Robinson: courage, team unity; Public Radio Interviews
With the release of the movie "42", there are many interviews connected to the movie as well as Jackie Robinson breaking the color barrier in baseball. There were two great interviews on Public Radio discussing the movie and the event.
Actor Chadwick Boseman plays Jackie Robinson in the film. On 6 April 2013, Scott Simon interviewed Boseman on National Public Radio. In that interview, Boseman talks about reflecting on a character when portraying him on the screen.
"And I think you learn something from every character, every character you play. As you do that, you find parts of yourself that you didn't know. So, in order to find those characters, you dig into yourself and say Jackie Robinson was a courageous man. So, what is courage to me and what is discipline to me?"
Looking at the initial weeks when Robinson played baseball, KPCC's John Rabe interviewed Jim Becker on 9 Aptil 2013. Becker is the last surviving newsman at Jackie Robinson's Major League debut.
"The day sent chills up my spine, and 66 years later it still does. I always said his failure would have been our failure, but the victory was his."
Becker also talked about how later in the season, the Philadelphia team was particularly hostile towards Robinson. It was that hostility that helped unify the Dodgers to support Robinson. Initially, half the Dodgers signed a petition against Robinson being on the team. When an opponent attacked one of them, that caused the team to unite.
The Chadwick Boseman radio interview can be found here: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/06/176357603/learning-how-to-steal-bases-like-jackie-robinsonay
The Jim Becker radio inteview can be found here: http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2013/04/09/31264/photos-jim-becker-last-surviving-newsman-at-jackie/
Actor Chadwick Boseman plays Jackie Robinson in the film. On 6 April 2013, Scott Simon interviewed Boseman on National Public Radio. In that interview, Boseman talks about reflecting on a character when portraying him on the screen.
"And I think you learn something from every character, every character you play. As you do that, you find parts of yourself that you didn't know. So, in order to find those characters, you dig into yourself and say Jackie Robinson was a courageous man. So, what is courage to me and what is discipline to me?"
Looking at the initial weeks when Robinson played baseball, KPCC's John Rabe interviewed Jim Becker on 9 Aptil 2013. Becker is the last surviving newsman at Jackie Robinson's Major League debut.
"The day sent chills up my spine, and 66 years later it still does. I always said his failure would have been our failure, but the victory was his."
Becker also talked about how later in the season, the Philadelphia team was particularly hostile towards Robinson. It was that hostility that helped unify the Dodgers to support Robinson. Initially, half the Dodgers signed a petition against Robinson being on the team. When an opponent attacked one of them, that caused the team to unite.
The Chadwick Boseman radio interview can be found here: http://www.npr.org/2013/04/06/176357603/learning-how-to-steal-bases-like-jackie-robinsonay
The Jim Becker radio inteview can be found here: http://www.scpr.org/programs/offramp/2013/04/09/31264/photos-jim-becker-last-surviving-newsman-at-jackie/
Saturday, April 6, 2013
Buffett on Business Management
In The Warren Buffett Way, Robert Hagstrom lists the three management tenets that Buffett uses to evaluate companies.
- Is management rational?
- Is management candid with the shareholders?
- Does management resist the institutional imperative?
- The organization resists any change in its current direction.
- Just as work expands to fill available time, corporate projects or acquisitions will materialize to soak up available funds.
- Any business cravings of the leader, however foolish, will quickly be supported by detailed rate-of-return and stategic studies prepared by his troops.
- The behavior of peer companies, whether they are expanding, acquiring, setting executive compensation or whatever, will be mindlessly imitated.
Wednesday, April 3, 2013
Thinking Long Term as a Leader
In The Leadership Challenge by Kouzes and Posner, they give a few great examples on how leaders should look at the long term. Significant changes happen in the long term.
Visions are future-oriented and made real over different spans of time.
Visions are future-oriented and made real over different spans of time.
- It may take three years from the time you decide to climb a mountain until you actually reach the summit.
- It may take a decade to build a company that is one of the best places to work.
- It may take a lifetime to make neighborhoods safe again for little children to walk alone to the corner store.
- It may take a century to restore a forest destroyed by a wildfire.
- It may take generations to set a people free.
Leaders should share their long term vision and commit to the short term struggles to reach that vision.
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