Monday, September 30, 2019

Today in Labor History September 30th

The Lawrence “Bread and Roses” strike

The Knights of Labor won their strike on the Wabash Railroad. – 1885
Strike leaders were prosecuted for the crime of treason for the first time in U.S. history. Henry C. Frick, chairman of the Carnegie Steel Company, convinced the chief justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court to issue warrants for the arrests of every member of the advisory board of the striking steel union for treason against the state. The 29 strike leaders were ultimately charged with plotting “to incite insurrection, rebellion & war against the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania”.  Jurors refused to convict them. – 1892
STRIKE! - Lawrence, MA 'Bread and Roses textile strike was in full swing, Railroad shopmen in 28 cities struck the Illinois Central Railroad and the Harriman lines, Mother Jones organized wives and more. CLICK TO TWEET
Seventy-year-old Mother Jones organized the wives of striking miners in Arnot, Pennsylvania to descend on the mine with brooms, mops and clanging pots and pans. They frightened away the mules and their scab drivers. The miners eventually won their strike. – 1899
The “Industrial Worker”, a newspaper that served as a  mouthpiece of the Industrial Workers of the World (IWW), issued its first call for “footloose hoboes and Wobblies” to hop freight trains for Missoula, to join in the free speech fight taking place there. From 1907-1917 the IWW carried out more than 30 Free Speech Fights across the US, generally to demand the right to organize workers in public places and to agitate from street corners. As police arrested one Wobbly for public speaking, another would take his or her place, resulting in thousands of arrests, as well as mass beatings by vigilantes. However, their civil disobedience often succeeded in clogging the jails and court systems to the point that cities were forced to back down and allow public speaking and agitation. – 1909
The Lawrence, Massachusetts “Bread and Roses” textile strike was in full swing. On this date, 12,000 textile workers walked out of mills to protest the arrests of two leaders of the strike. Police clubbed strikers and arrested some, while the bosses fired 1,500. Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) co-founder Big Bill Haywood threatened another general strike to get the workers reinstated. Strike leaders Arturo Giovannitti and Joe Ettor were eventually acquitted 58 days later. – 1912
Railroad shopmen in 28 cities struck the Illinois Central Railroad and the Harriman lines for an 8-hour day, improved conditions and union recognition, but railroad officials obtained sweeping injunctions against them and relied on police and armed guards to protect strikebreakers. – 1915
Black farmers met in Elaine, Arkansas to establish the Progressive Farmers and Householders Union to fight for better pay and higher cotton prices. They were shot at by a group of whites, and returned the fire. News of the confrontation spread and a riot ensued, leaving at least 100, perhaps several hundred blacks dead and 67 indicted for inciting violence. – 1919
The National Farm Workers Association (predecessor to the United Farm Workers) was created during a convention called by Cesar Chavez and Delores Huerta in Fresno, California. – 1962

Monday Morning in the Blogosphere

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Opinion journalism drives subscription traffic - Poynter

Nexstar silences Bill Kurtis as voice of WGN Radio - Robert Feder

New York Magazine’s Editor-in-Chief Is Ready for Its Next Chapter - Folio

MSU Professor Explores the Role of Newspapers in the Digital Age - KBIA

Publishing tech play an example of Bezos’ influence on the newspaper - Geek Wire

My print-only local newspaper won't chase Twitter likes, Google searches - USA Today

‘The tip of the iceberg’: News publishers are embracing registration walls (again) - Digiday

Here’s How News Sites and Advocacy Groups Measure Loyalty - Membership Puzzle Project

After 110 years in print, The Diamondback will become online only in March - The Diamondback

Media Association Picks 5 African-American Newspapers For Digital Transformation - Media Post

Saturday, September 28, 2019

Today in Labor History September 28th


IWW Demonstration

The International Workingmen’s Association is founded in London.  It was an international organization trying to unite a variety of different left-wing, socialist, communist and anarchist political groups and unions.  It functioned for about 12 years, growing to a membership declared to be eight million, before being disbanded at its Philadelphia conference in 1876, victim of infighting brought on by the wide variety of members’ philosophies. – 1864
The International Workingmen's Association is founded, and Federal agents arrested 165 Wobblies.CLICK TO TWEET
Federal agents arrested 165 Wobblies (members of the Industrial Workers of the World) for their resistance to World War I. Over 300 IWW leaders were arrested in September and their offices raided throughout the country. Of course, their real crime was continuing to engage in labor strikes and slowdowns, despite the war propaganda. – 1917

Delta Media Group buys Wisconsin companies


Mike Mathes, president and owner of Delta Publications and Delta Digital Strategies, has announced the sale of the two companies to the Delta Media Group, headed by Jim O’Rourke, a 25-year veteran of the newspaper industry, and Joe Mathes, a long-time member of the Delta Publications family.
Delta Publications publishes the Tri-County News, serving Kiel, Chilton and New Holstein (Wisconsin) along with the Tempo, a weekly free paper serving the Between the Lakes market area. In addition, Delta Online offers digital advertising solutions for a customer base that goes beyond the traditional media and local market place, according to news release on the sale. 
The newly formed Delta Media Group is an affiliate company of the O’Rourke Media Group, which owns four local community newspapers and a marketing agency in northwest Vermont.
All current Delta Publication employees will be hired by the new company, the release said. 
The sale of the business was facilitated by media broker Julie Bergman of Grimes, McGovern & Associates.
News and Tech

Saturday Morning in the Blogosphere

Ontario book store still going strong




Student newspapers stolen at Radford University - Daily Progress

A respite from negative news, but who cares? - The Wilson Times

41 years of creating benchmarks in media and innovation - Gulf News UAE

Rachel Reeves, first female publisher of The Miami Times, dies - Philadelphia Tribune

Elementary school launching its first school newspaper - Miami Community Newspapers

WhatsApp efforts to curb misinformation aren’t entirely effective, research shows - Poynter

Reporter out for old racist tweets after digging up tweets of Iowan philanthropist - Fox News

Nicaraguan editorial group closes El Nuevo Diario and two other newspapers - Knight Center

Facebook Confirmed That, Unlike The Rest Of Us, Politicians Don't Get Fact-Checked - Buzzfeed

News Giants Gannett and GateHouse Sink Even as Feds OK Their $1.4 Billion Merger - The Street

Friday, September 27, 2019

APTech launching LeadingPRINT CEO Summit at PRINT 19


The Association for Print Technologies (APTech) is launching its inaugural LeadingPRINT CEO Summit at PRINT 19, the print industry event taking place October 3–5 at McCormick Place North in Chicago. The summit carries the provocative theme of “Overcoming What Sucks About Your Business.”
The summit is set for October 4 from noon to 1:30 p.m. and will feature a panel of CEOs: Jon Buddington, CEO, More Vang; Gina Danner, CEO, NextPage; and Tom Moe, president, Daily Printing. The moderator will be Mark Potter, CEO, Conduit.
“We’re looking forward to a frank discussion on how other print industry leaders can overcome the harsh realities of running a business,” says Thayer Long, president, APTech. “An open forum centered on staffing, insurance, regulations, cash flow, and evolving technologies will hopefully open minds to new ways of running and improving businesses.”
The LeadingPRINT CEO Summit is an extension of the organization’s LeadingPRINT magazine and content platform and is designed to bring insight, tools, best-practices and entrepreneurial success stories to a wider and more diverse audience, according to APTech.
The International Newspaper Group’s summit, a leadership networking event for newspaper production, operations and logistics leaders, is held around the same time as PRINT 19. Participants will recognize the shared name the partnered events bear, ING/PRINT 2019.
News and Tech

Today in Labor History – September 27th

Wreck of the Old 97

Textile workers struck in Fall River, Massachusetts, demanding bread for their starving children. Approximately one in six children between the ages of 10 and 15 was working during the second half of the 19th century, primarily in textile mills, print shops, coal mines and factories. –  1875
STRIKE! - Textile workers in Fall River, MA, ITU strikes against the LA Times, ILGWU strikes New York the Pacific Maritime Association closes 39 ports and the Old 97 derailed and inspired a song.CLICK TO TWEET
The International Typographical Union (ITU) renewed a strike against the Los Angeles Times and began a boycott that ran intermittently from 1896 to 1908. A local anti-Times committee in 1903 persuaded William Randolph Hearst to start a rival paper, the Los Angeles Examiner. Although the ITU kept up the fight into the 1920s, the Times remained totally nonunion until 2009, when the GCIU—now the Graphic Communications Conference of the Teamsters—organized the pressroom. – 1893
The Old 97, a Southern Railway train officially known as the Fast Mail, derailed near Danville, Virginia while en route to Spence, North Carolina. Excessive speed, in an attempt to maintain schedules, was the most likely cause. The train derailed at the Stillhouse Trestle, where the train careened off the side of the bridge, killing Engineer Joseph “Steve” Broady, ten other railroad and postal workers, and injuring seven others. The Wreck of the Old 97 inspired balladeers; a 1924 recording is sometimes cited as the first million-selling country music record. – 1903
The International Ladies’ Garment Workers Union (ILGWU) began a strike against New York shirtwaist factories.  The strike primarily involved Jewish women. It was led by Clara Lemlich and supported by the National Women’s Trade Union League of America (NWTUL). This would become the “Uprising of the 20,000”, resulting in 339 of 352 struck firms (not including the Triangle Factory), signing agreements with the union. The Triangle Factory fire that killed 246 would occur less than two years later. – 1909
The Pacific Maritime Association, representing shipping and stevedoring employers, closed all 29 ports on the West Coast during a contract dispute with the International Longshoremen’s and Warehousemen’s Union. The lockout, which lasted 11 days, was the first major work stoppage on western docks since the 1971 longshore workers’ strike that closed the ports for several months. Work resumed in October 2002 after President George W. Bush invoked the Taft-Hartley Act and obtained a court order opening the ports. Negotiations would continue for another six weeks before an agreement was reached on a new contract that gave dock workers hefty benefit and pay increases and union jurisdiction over additional waterfront positions while allowing employers to utilize labor-saving technologies for cargo tracking. – 2002

Thursday, September 26, 2019

Thursday Morning in the Blogosphere

Nexstar completes buy of Tribune Media


Nexstar Media Group’s completed its $4.1 billion buy of Chicago-based Tribune Media last week, the Chicago Tribune reported.
The purchase creates the country’s biggest local TV station ownership group and places WGN’s TV, radio and cable stations under the Dallas firm’s umbrella.
The FCC had approved the deal last Monday. The deal was valued at some $7.2 billion including the assuming of Tribune Media’s outstanding debt, according to Nexstar.
The combination creates the nation’s largest pure-play local broadcast television and digital media company, with national coverage and reach to approximately 39 percent of U.S. television households (reflecting the FCC’s UHF discount, which lets media firms tabulate their UHF stations at half reach). According to Nexstar, the company will benefit from increased operational, geographic and economic diversity and scale as a result of Tribune Media’s diverse portfolio of media assets including owned or operated broadcast television stations in major U.S. markets, local news and entertainment content, ownership of WGN America, a 31.3 percent ownership stake in Food Network, and equity holdings in several digital media businesses.
News and Tech

Today in Labor History September 26th

The first production Ford Model T left the Piquette Plant in Detroit, Michigan. It was the first car ever manufactured on an assembly line, with interchangeable parts. The auto industry was to become a major U.S. employer, accounting for as many as one of every eight to ten jobs in the country. – 1908
Sociologist and photographer Lewis Hine is born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin.  In 1908, Hine became the photographer for the National Child Labor Committee and spent the next decade documenting child labor to help the organization’s lobbying efforts to end child labor in American industry.

Wednesday, September 25, 2019

Services for Jim Robinson


Services for Jim Robinson will be held at Richard Peterson Funeral Home on Friday October 4th, 2019 at 1:00 P.M.

123 West G Street
Ontario, CA. 91762

(909) 986-1196








Drupa tour to visit 27 countries


The drupa World Tour 2019/2020 started on Sept. 10 in Mexico City and will continue until spring 2020. In September, seven more conferences and events will follow in Ecuador, Peru, Colombia, Canada, Brazil, Chile and Argentina. Through April 2020, events will take place in twelve Asian countries, the U.S., Eastern Europe, several EU countries and North Africa. A total of 35 trips to 27 countries worldwide are currently planned. The organizers of the drupa world tour are drupa organizer Messe Dusseldorf and PrintPromotion.
Delegations consisting of the CEOs of various printing press manufacturers and leading representatives of PrintPromotion and Messe Dusseldorf will present trends in printing and paper tech, innovations in the graphics industry and packaging printing and information on innovative applications in the field of industrial and functional printing, organizers say.
Among the trends are possibilities offered by artificial intelligence and changes afoot involving the so-called platform economy and the circular economy. The delegations will also report about the status of preparations for drupa 2020. The international trade fair for printing technologies will be held from June 16–26, 2020, at fairgrounds in Dusseldorf, Germany.
“We are looking forward to exciting meetings with industry experts, journalists and representatives of local media partners, industry and trade associations,” said drupa Director Sabine Geldermann of the tour.
News and Tech

The La Verne NBA REFEREE STORY w/Mayor Don Kendrick



The La Verne NBA REFEREE STORY w/Mayor Don Kendrick. "J.t. Orr" second generation La Verne resident and Bonita High School graduate talks with the Mayor about his connections and history with the City! #LaVerneProud


Times shuts down NYT en Español


The New York Times has shut down NYT en Español as a separate, standalone operation, the company announced Sept. 17. Since it launched in 2016, the site published around 10 original and translated New York Times stories a day in Spanish.
The site was not financially successful, the company said.
Editors will continue to translate Times journalism into more than a dozen languages, including Spanish, which will continue to appear at www.nytimes.com/es. The company will increase investment in the expansion of broader translation efforts, it said.
The company said the change won’t affect NYT’s coverage of Latin America, which includes dedicated staff based in Medellin, Mexico City and Rio de Janeiro.
News and Tech

Wednesday Morning in the Blogosphere

NYT podcast hits a billion downloads


The New York Times’ Daily podcast has hit a billion downloads.
Since the first episode in February 2017, “The Daily” has featured 224 Times colleagues in at least 30 countries across 691 episodes, according to The Times.
The most downloaded episode of 2019 — and in the podcast’s history — was “Reckoning With the Real Michael Jackson.” The most downloaded episode from 2018 was “The Blasey-Kavanaugh Hearing.” The most downloaded episode from 2017 was “A Hate Crime, or a Wound from War?”
The twenty-minute, five-day-a week show is hosted by Times journalist Michael Barbaro.
The New York Times Company mentioned the podcast in its comments on its 2019 second-quarter results. “It was a good quarter for advertising with total advertising revenue growing slightly. Digital advertising grew by almost 14 percent with strong performances in direct sales, including from ‘The Daily’ podcast and creative services,” according to the company.
News and Tech

Today in Labor History September 25th

Lewis Hines

American photographer Lewis Hine was born in Oshkosh, Wisconsin. Hine used his camera as a tool for social reform. His photographs were instrumental in changing the child labor laws in the United States. – 1874
Lewis Hine was born, African-American sharecroppers strike,  and John Howard Lawson was born.CLICK TO TWEET
A group of African-American sharecroppers in Lee County, Arkansas perhaps loosely affiliated with the Colored Farmers’ National Alliance and Union (commonly call the Colored Farmers’ Alliance), struck to increase the wages they received from local planters for picking cotton. By the time a white mob put down the strike, 15 African-Americans and one white plantation manager were killed. – 1891
Playwright John Howard Lawson was born on this date in New York City. Lawson wrote several plays about the working class, including The International (1928), which depicts a world revolution by the proletariat, and Marching Song (1937), about a sit-down strike. He was for several years head of the Hollywood division of the Communist Party USA. He was also the organization’s cultural manager and answered directly to V.J. Jerome, the Party’s New York-based cultural chief. He was the first president of the Writers Guild of America, West after the Screen Writers Guild divided into two regional organizations. In the late 1940s, Lawson was blacklisted as a member of the “Hollywood Ten” for his refusal to tell the House Committee on Un-American Activities about his political allegiances. – 1894

Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Jim Robinson Rest in Peace

Jim Robinson wearing the white hat


James Albert Robinson (88) of Walnut, California has passed. Mr. Robinson worked as a truck driver for the Los Angeles Times for many decades, and was always smiling. He was a very fun person and a bit shy at first, but once he knew you he would open up.

His son Steve Polee informed me of his families loss.

Services are currently pending.

Arkansas County Broadcasters buys Stuttgart Daily Leader


Arkansas County Broadcasters has bought the Stuttgart Daily Leader (Arkansas).
The group operates under the East Arkansas Broadcasters (EAB) umbrella. East Arkansas Broadcasters is a family-owned media company that operates 51 radio signals in markets that include Jonesboro, Wynne and Stuttgart. EAB also operates the EAB Ag Network and the EAB Sports Network, radio partner of Arkansas State University and Arkansas Tech University.
“We are committed to strong local news, information and community involvement in all of our markets,” said Bobby Caldwell, owner and president of EAB. “We have operated this group of local radio stations for Stuttgart and the surrounding region since 1986 and look forward to continuing to provide the area with entertainment, news, information and great advertising outlets for many years to come. The purchase of the Stuttgart Daily Leader further solidifies this commitment.”
GateHouse had closed the paper Sept. 6, along with the Helena-West Helena World. GateHouse made a deal earlier this month to sell the Helena paper to area entrepreneur Chuck Davis, the paper reported.
News and Tech

Today in Labor History September 24th

The Chicago 8

The Industrial Workers of the World (IWW) were declared illegal in Canada. The ban was lifted in 1919. By 1923, the IWW had several branches in Canada, including the Lumberworkers International Union (LWIU) 120 and Marine Transport Workers International Union 510 in Vancouver, and an LWIU branch in Cranbrook BC for a total of 5,600 members. – 1918
The IWW was declared illegal in Canada, and the Chicago 8 Conspiracy Trial begins.CLICK TO TWEET
The Chicago 8 Conspiracy Trial began on this date. David Dellinger, Rennie Davis, Thomas Hayden, Abbie Hoffman, Jerry Rubin, John Froines, Lee Weiner, and Bobby Seale all went on trial before Judge Julius Hoffman for inciting a riot.  – 1969

Flint CPS Inks expects price increases for 2020


Flint CPS Inks plans to implement selective price increases for 2020, the company said. The company cites challenges in the area of raw material shortages, worsening supply chain conditions and raw material cost increases as reasons behind the increases.
India and China are adopting stricter environmental regulations on pigments and base chemicals manufacturing, which is leading to factory closures, reducing quantities available and increasing costs, the company says.
In addition, although the price of oil is comparatively stable, refining capability for the solvents Flint CPS uses is more restricted, leading to upward cost pressure, according to Flint CPS Inks.
Transport costs are also rising, partially reflecting problems in obtaining drivers but also through truck use challenges due to lower customer transit volumes, the company says.
Flint Group develops, manufactures and markets a range of printing consumables and printing equipment, including conventional and energy curable inks and coatings for most offset, flexographic and gravure applications, pressroom chemicals and plate-making equipment.
Headquartered in Luxembourg, Flint Group employs some 7,500 people.
News and Tech