Category Archives: Times They Are A-Changing

Times They Are A-Changing

4 Steps to Catapult You to Retirement Success | The Motley Fool

Image source: Getty Images.
Image source: Getty Images.


Whether or not you follow these four easy steps could determine how successful your retirement is.

1. Set a retirement date goal

Are you someone who can’t wait until the day you leave your job and hope you can retire early? Or do you love working and will delay it as long as possible? Everyone is different and whether you stop working for good at 62, 67, or 70 is completely up to you.

There is no right or wrong answer. But setting a goal can help you create a plan that will help ensure you attain it. Once you set a date, you’ll know approximately how much time you have which can aid you in determining how much you need to save each year. 

Source: 4 Steps to Catapult You to Retirement Success | The Motley Fool

Libraries Are an Essential Service. Give Librarians the Vaccine Now | Opinion

 A librarian cleans books at Freedom Preparatory Academy as teachers begin to prepare to restart school after it was closed in March due to COVID-19 on August 13, 2020 in Provo, Utah. George Frey/Getty Images
A librarian cleans books at Freedom Preparatory Academy as teachers begin to prepare to restart school after it was closed in March due to COVID-19 on August 13, 2020 in Provo, Utah. George Frey/Getty Images


Opinion – John Chrastka
, executive director of EveryLibrary, the national political action committee for libraries, 

America can defeat COVID-19 through wide vaccine distribution. The CDC‘s Phase 1a vaccination guidance was wise to focus on inoculating the most vulnerable populations and our healthcare workers. Phase 1b, which is being implemented by health departments right now, is a practical approach to preserving societal functioning by vaccinating essential workers and other at-risk populations. But as state and local health departments consider who to include in Phase 1c, policymakers need to look at what our society needs beyond reopening our economy.

For America to return to full health, we need institutions like libraries ready to help us connect with who we are and to energize us for what is to come.

Source: Libraries Are an Essential Service. Give Librarians the Vaccine Now | Opinion

How Hollywood Writers Won a War | Vanity Fair

From Capitol Films Collection
From Capitol Films Collection

In April 2019, thousands of Hollywood writers fired their agents en masse. The move convulsed the entertainment industry. It looked like an impossible David and Goliath scenario: The Writers Guild of America had declared war on the immensely powerful talent agencies, several of which had mutated into full-blown media conglomerates over the years, backed by private-equity money.

The WGA argued that these agencies—in producing their own projects and creating package deals that combined writers, actors, and directors—no longer had the best interests of their clients as their first priority. The packages, they believed, were riddled with conflicts of interest and weren’t necessarily the best deal for writers.

“This has the potential to be a really, really big bang,” one veteran TV writer told me in March that year.

Nearly two years later, the bitter struggle concluded with a plot twist: The writers have triumphed. One by one, the agencies signed on to WGA’s terms, agreeing to phase out the widespread practice of packaging. William Morris Endeavor (WME), the last agency holdout, finally came to an agreement earlier this month.

Editor’s Note: Sometimes, it’s true.. the pen is mightier than the sword!

Source: How Hollywood Writers Won a War | Vanity Fair

Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Beat Poet And Small-Press Publisher, Dies At 101 : NPR

  Poet and author Lawrence Ferlinghetti, pictured above in 1960, was born on March 24, 1919. AP
Poet and author Lawrence Ferlinghetti, pictured above in 1960, was born on March 24, 1919. AP


Lawrence Ferlinghetti has died in San Francisco. He was 101. Ferlinghetti is probably best known for three things: his Beat poetry, his San Francisco bookstore and small press, and his defense of the First Amendment in a famous court case.

His most famous work is a 1958 collection of poetry called A Coney Island of the Mind. In it, he compares the horrors depicted in Francisco Goya’s paintings of the Napoleonic wars to scenes of post-World War II America.

A Coney Island of the Mind
Poems
by Lawrence Ferlinghetti
Paperback, 93 pages
purchase

Source: Lawrence Ferlinghetti, Beat Poet And Small-Press Publisher, Dies At 101 : NPR

San Diego Stadium farewell: 50,000-seat facility made for ‘major league city’ – The San Diego Union-Tribune

Mission Valley stadium provided half a century of entertainment, millions and millions of memories…

May be behind paywall 🙁

Source: San Diego Stadium farewell: 50,000-seat facility made for ‘major league city’ – The San Diego Union-Tribune

How Librarians Can Fight QAnon – The Atlantic

As “Do the research” becomes a rallying cry for conspiracy theorists, classical information literacy is not enough.

Link and alert thanks to: Library Link of the Day
http://www.tk421.net/librarylink/  (archive, rss, subscribe options)

Source: How Librarians Can Fight QAnon – The Atlantic