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ANDREW BARBANO
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"Our republic and its press will rise or fall together." — Joseph Pulitzer

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Photo: Debra Reid, Sparks Tribune



   Everybody knows the dice are loaded.
Everybody rolls with their fingers crossed.
   Everybody knows the war is over.
Everybody knows the good guys lost.
   Everybody knows the fight was fixed.
The poor stay poor, the rich get rich.
   That's how it goes.
Everybody knows...
Everybody knows the scene is dead
   But there's gonna be a meter on your bed
That will disclose
   What everybody knows...
   Everybody talking to their pockets.
Everybody wants a box of chocolates
   and a long red rose.
   Everybody knows. Everybody knows.
That's how it goes.
Everybody knows.

By Leonard Cohen (1934-2016) & Sharon Robinson
© 1988 CBS Records, Inc.


I hope you understand I just had to go back to the island.
Leon Russell, 1942-2016


Of mice and guns
Barbwire by Andrew Quarantino Barbáno / Expanded from the Sparks Tribune 12-28-2022 / Updated 12-28-2022, 1-11 & 1-13-2023 / Expansions in blue


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   The Dean of Reno Bloggers could very well be Andrew Barbano, self-described "fighter of public demons," who started putting his "Barbwire" columns online in 1996 and now runs 10 sites.

RENO NEWS & REVIEW, 11-9-2006

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Imprison enough rats in a cage and they destroy each other and their society.

The analogy to large crowded public schools is not perfect but there are substantial overlaps.

Several times over the decades, I've related the story of "Dr. Calhoun's Horrible Mousery," a 1970 piece by Newsweek Magazine columnist Stewart Alsop.

Ecologist John Calhoun gained fame researching the effects of overcrowding. It remains scary half a century later.

His mice organized into hierarchies but the squeeze debilitated each. Even the few pampered elites lost all incentives and "neither copulate nor conceive," Alsop wrote.

"All the mice are afflicted in varying degrees with what Dr. Calhoun calls a 'withdrawal syndrome'...they chew on each other and the ones being chewed on don't run away."

Live births ceased to happen as the society collapsed toward extinction. Many chose escape via a "carbo box," a "mouse Auschwitz filled with carbon dioxide." Survivors huddled together, unable to function even in newly uncrowded conditions.

When I saw news of a teacher being beaten by a student at Sparks' Dilworth Middle School, I flashed on Dr. Calhoun. Attacks are apparently frequent occurrences.

Zounds.

I thus offer an outsider's unworkable solution: First, dump the 19th Century model.

Ever wonder where summer vacation comes from? Families needed their youngsters to work the fields. That world no longer exists. TV nonetheless still has fall premieres — right after crops are in and back-to-school sales are over.

Next, turn existing school buildings into low-cost housing. Pepper the cityscape with small neighborhood facilities similar to today's charter schools. Expensive, yes.

Cheaper than rat cages.

My high school had 400 students. I can't imagine mouseries of 4,000 or more.

Always marketing, the gun lobby wants teachers to start carrying firearms. No less than former Sparks Washoe school trustee Kevin Christensen now advocates a return to corporal punishment — let teachers beat the snot out of snotty kids. (Reno Gazette-Journal 12-25-2022)

My Catholic high school allowed such violence. Some of my peers never recovered.

Read up on Dr. Calhoun. Get afraid. Then get moving.

UNION BUSTERS BUSTED AGAIN. Keolis-19, the superspreader foreign contractor running the Sparks-Reno bus system, just lost another round. Subcontracting has been one of the most successful union-damaging schemes ever developed by corporations.

Keolis subcontracted "permanent temporary" bus washers and utility employees, a typical maneuver to avoid paying union wages and benefits.

An arbitrator ruled in favor of the members of Teamsters Local 533 just in time for Christmas. Bueno!

[[ UPDATE 1-11-2023: THISISRENO.COM —> KEOLIS LOSES AGAIN ]]

UPDATE 1-13-2023 GMT: Virginia Transit Strike May Impact Northern Nevada
By Kristen Hackbarth / ThisIsReno.com 1-12-2023


SHOW WITHIN A SHOW. By the time this column hits the streets, KNPB TV-5 will have premiered "Groucho & Cavett" (9:00 p.m. PST Tuesday 12-27) on its longrunning "American Masters" series. Check local listings for reruns or go online.

The great Groucho Marx did Dick Cavett's talk show seven times, a match made in TV heaven.

The day they first met, he invited Cavett to walk with him thru the streets of New York. Groucho did nonstop schtick with shopkeepers, cops, mimes, passersby, Elmo — all fair game for lotsa laughs.

MARXIAN COMIC GEOGRAPHY. I saw a PBS promo of Groucho singing his signature "Lydia the Tattooed Lady" about a comely wench with a world map all over her body.

"You can learn a lot from Lydia."

I doubt they'll run some of the spicier verses. [UPDATE: They did.] Nor will they air what Groucho told Cavett was "the perfect joke." Hint: It's about two guys in a bar. And a horse. [UPDATE: They did not.]

All creatures great and small were fair game for the Marxist regime. "I'm not a vegetarian but I eat animals who are...One morning, I shot an elephant in my pajamas. How he got in my pajamas, I'll never know."

And my favorite, beloved of librarians to this very day: "Outside of a dog, a book is man's best friend. Inside of a dog, it's too dark to read."

He even marketed his dotage. His home health aides were four leggy showgirls. A reporter asked if he was a dirty old man.

"He's kind of a male chauvinist piglet," responded one of the lovelies.

Lydia would understand.

MACHINE GUN MICHELE STRIKES AGAIN. My fantasy fiancé Italiana just scored another job for which she is totally unqualified. Apparently, her love of Czar Donaldov and firearms scored her a judgeship from the retro Nye County Commission.

In Nevada's Cow Counties, anybody can be a justice of the peace without a law degree.

Ms. Fiore is manifestly not just any body.

Who was that lady I saw you with last night?
(But can she cook?)

I forecast madcap justice with no peace in her marketing campaign. Make no mistake. That's the hustle.

Barbwire predixions are well considered and my batting average is very high.

For instance, I forecast a 2016 Republican victory with 17 candidates in the GOP presidential race.

I said that gas prices would start to drop right after last month's election. They did and continue to crater.

I will bet six bucks against a fancy latte that shameless Signorina Fiore already has an agent and will pull some insane shenanigans to generate national press and score a "Judge Judy meets Maury" syndicated TV freak show.

My uncoverage of the Barefaced Principessa resulted in the only time this column ever got censored. Fortunately, that bluenosed editor only lasted a few weeks. (Later editors ran it.)

The Reno Gazette-Journal had no such reservations. My favorite remains a 2018 headline "Fiore: Lawmakers have 'partied' at brothel."

She refused to name names.

She told journalist Ray Hagar " I would never rat a peer out." (Dr. Calhoun, call your office.)

Despite all the hassle, I rejoice that this Italian mother's dreamgirl is back in the game and providing visions of sugar plums and polenta for peerless pruriently peering pundits.

BELATED CHRISTMAS PRESENT — Brilliantly visionary advice from French Renaissance Man Jean Cocteau's "Letter to the Americans":

"Human dignity is at stake. Be what you are. A people who preserved its childhood. A people young and honest. A people in whom the lifeblood circulates.

" Disentangle yourselves. Question others less and yourselves more.

"Confide in your friends. Don't concern yourself with those encounters where drinks are served but nothing is said.
Don't disorient yourselves with vain activities.

"Don't surrender yourself to the lethal vertigo of radio and television. Television encourages the mind to stop chewing, to gulp down soft, predigested food.

"But the mind has robust teeth. Don't let them only serve as the ornamental smiles of the stars."

The great writer and filmmaker (1889-1963) wrote that after a visit to New York City.

In 1949!

¡ se puede!

Be well. Raise hell.
/ Esté bien. Haga infierno. (Pardon my Spanglish.)
être bien, élever l'enfer (Pardon my French.) Stammi bene. Scatenare l'inferno. (And Italian.)
___________________
Andrew Quarantino Barbano is a 54-year Nevadan and editor of NevadaLabor.com, SenJoeNeal.org, DoctorLawyerWatch.com, BallotBoxing.US, ConsumerCoalitionv.org, ChantalCoalition.org, Rentvolution.org, MIssissippiWestNV.org and CesarChavezNevada.com among others. He is a longtime member of the Ren
o-Sparks NAACP and Sparks-based Communications Workers of America Local 9413/AFL-CIO. As always, his comments are entirely his own. Barbwire by Barbano has originated in the Sparks Tribune since 1988.

Web Xtras & Smoking Guns—>

GROUCHO, CALL YOUR OFFICE. Oscar winners Harold Arlen and Yip Harburg ("Over the Rainbow") wrote "Lydia the Tattooed Lady" for the 1939 Marx Bros. film "At the Circus." Performed on the "The Muppet Show" and reportedly Jim Henson's favorite song, the Muppets sang it at his funeral. I don't wanna know if Miss Piggy got tats. (From the Barbwire of 12-13-2012.)

Giants great and small
Barbwire by Andrew Quarantino Barbáno / Expanded from the Sparks Tribune 12-21-2022 / Expansions in blue


My longtime friend Jean Stoess was a tiny giant.

Barely five feet tall, the former Washoe County Commissioner notched a leviathan career of public service that many much more exalted could not hope to approach.

She died at her Reno home on Dec. 3 at 85. If ever there was a hall of fame for community involvement, Jean would have been awarded the key to front door on the day the building was named for her.

After earning a business administration degree from the University of Oregon, she had to fight the good ole boy establishment to become a graduate assistant while working toward her master's. (Some old anachronism considered it work for men only.) That engagement led to permanent one. She met Al Stoess when he borrowed a typewriter. They eloped to Reno and Nevada was thus forever enriched by both.

She earned her master's in journalism from UNR but Jean Louise Babcock's news career was well underway by high school. She later completed an editing and publishing course at Stanford University. She composed the text for legendary photographer Donald Dondero's "Dateline Reno" book. I treasure a couple of autographed copies.

Democratic and Republican governors appointed Jean to a wide range of boards and commissions. In 1971, Mike O'Callaghan named her to the state Gaming Policy Committee and in 1977 made her the first woman to serve on the Washoe County Commission where she filled a vacancy. She won election to the post in 1978. She chaired the Regional Transportation Commission and also served on the Airport Authority and the State Board of Medical Examiners.

As western area manager of the News Election Service/Voter News Service from 1985 to 1996, Jean coordinated reporting in 13 western states delivering results to major television networks and international wire services.

In 1998, she became Nevada manager of the Associated Press, responsible for hiring, training and managing journalists in all Nevada counties. She was a guest member of the Reno Gazette-Journal editorial board. Back in her early days in San Francisco, she became a member of the Office and Professional Employees International Union/AFL-CIO while working at Continental Freightways.

Jean chaired the Sierra Club's Toiyabe Chapter, served as publicity chair of the Nevada Environmental Education Council and became a founding member of the board of directors for PBS affiliate KNPB TV-5. In 2002, she chaired a successful bond issue campaign for the county's regional animal shelter.

She is survived by her husband of more than 60 years, university professor Dr. Alfred Stoess, three children and two grandchildren. Her complete biography/obituary will be linked to the expanded edition of this column at NevadaLabor.com/

Thanks for coming to the High Desert Outback of the American Dream and helping us out for a lifetime, dear friend. You done us proud.

BLUE NOTES. Can't blame current Sparks Police Chief Chris Crawforth for wanting the Reno job. He's the most community-oriented cop I've experienced in all my time in this state.

After fighting independent review for many years, Las Vegas Metro PD finally caved to getting a citizen police review board after a few fatalities, "accidental" shootings and choke-hold "accidents," especially that of Charles Bush. He was a black casino executive killed by a choke hold as he was rousted out of bed during a mistaken no-knock raid. Bush was once a UNR student.

Perhaps the kicker came when two Metro officers were arrested for getting into a pickup and doing drive-by shootings for sport. (References at NevadaLabor.com/)

When the heat of night subsided, LV's citizen review apparatus fell into disrepair. Former Reno Police Chief Steve Pitts established citizen review during his tenure but it likewise went sideways when he left.

Mayor Hillary Schieve's attempts to get Reno to establish citizen review met with start-stop hiccups. A panel was authorized. I attended initial formative meetings. Then the city staffer in charge left for greener pastures and matters stagnated. Mlle. Mayor then began working toward a regional human rights commission five years ago. Washoe County said no. Sparks said we can't afford it. (What else is new?) Then came the plague. Today, Reno's human rights commission meets quarterly.

Enter Chief Crawforth who initiated a citizen board as one of his first official acts in Sparks. He is now a finalist for the Reno job and I hope he gets it. In that position, he will be able to set the standard for the region and perhaps the state.

LIFE IMITATES ART IMITATES LIFE DEPT. I just caught a re-run of the killer 1990 action film "The Hunt for Red October." British actor Peter Firth, who later starred in the BBC series "Spooks" (re-titled "MI-5" for PBS), played a stereotypical Communist Party apparatchik assigned as "political officer" on star Sean Connery's nuclear submarine.

Firth proved that there are no small parts. In his only scene, he made you hate him from his first words. Connery deftly dispatched the weasely watcher.

The point of this movie trivia? Firth's despicable character was named (drum roll, please) Ivan Yurievich PUTIN. When author Tom Clancy's book was published in 1984, the current warmongering Russian dictator was an unknown KGB spy. Firth eerily resembles the current Russian despot in the film.

Now you know why the late Clancy was so highly respected by the U.S. intel establishment.

Where is Sean Connery when we need him?

ART IMITATES ART.
I finally saw director James Cameron's blockbuster "Avatar" when it hit Disney's ABC network last week in promotion of the sequel "Pandora."

Watching "Avatar," I swore I'd seen it before. And I had. Fortunately for Mr. Cameron, Disney acquired the rights for "Avatar" when it acquired 21st Century Fox in 2019.

The script of "Avatar" was a complete ripoff of the 1992 animated feature "FernGully: The Last Rainforest," distributed by Fox and starring the voices of Robin Williams, Samantha Mathis, Tim Curry, Grace Zabriskie and Christian Slater.

The real god of Pandora is Mammon. So what else is new?

¡ se puede!

Be well. Raise hell.
/ Esté bien. Haga infierno. (Pardon my Spanglish.)
être bien, élever l'enfer (Pardon my French.) Stammi bene. Scatenare l'inferno. (And Italian.)
__________________
_
Andrew Quarantino Barbano is a 54-year Nevadan and editor of NevadaLabor.com, SenJoeNeal.org, DoctorLawyerWatch.com, BallotBoxing.US, ConsumerCoalitionv.org, ChantalCoalition.org, Rentvolution.org, MIssissippiWestNV.org and CesarChavezNevada.com among others. He is a longtime member of the Reno-Sparks NAACP and Sparks-based Communications Workers of America Local 9413/AFL-CIO. As always, his comments are entirely his own. Barbwire by Barbano has originated in the Sparks Tribune since 1988.

Law & Order Special Victims: Nevada's Disposable Cops
Barbwire by Andrew Quarantino Barbáno / Expanded from the Sparks Tribune 12-14-2022, expanded on Dec. 20. / Expansions in blue

If you watch the longest-running TV drama in U.S. history, you are acquainted with New York Special Victims Unit Capt. Olivia Benson.

We had somebody that good in these parts for 16 years but her employers — us — destroyed her.

I don't know about you, but I wouldn't want to be a cop these days. Police departments nationally are pirating officers from other jurisdictions because they can't get enough applicants. One Rocky Mountain chief hired a dozen New York City cops to come to Colorado for much better money.

As usual, stingy low-tax Nevada is a leader in screwing over our first responders.

Police departments around the state are training grounds for those seeking the holy grail, the City of Henderson P.D. which by reputation pays the best in the state. Want to work for the highway patrol? You have to start at the disastrous Ely Prison. Sparks has long had trouble getting qualified applicants.

Can't blame current Rail City Chief Chris Crawforth for wanting the Reno job. He's the most community-oriented cop I've experienced in all my time in this state. After fighting independent review for many years, Las Vegas Metro PD finally caved to getting a citizen police review board after a few fatalities, "accidental" shootings and choke-hold "accidents," especially that of Charles Bush. He was a black casino executive killed by a choke hold as he was rousted out of bed during a mistaken no-knock raid. Bush was once a UNR student.

Perhaps the kicker came when two LV Metro officers were arrested for getting into a pickup and doing drive-by shootings for sport. (Barbwire references at NevadaLabor.com/)

When the heat of night subsided, LV's citizen review apparatus fell into disrepair. Former Reno Police Chief Steve Pitts established citizen review during his tenure but it fell into disuse.

Mayor Hillary Schieve's attempts to get Reno to establish citizen review met with start-stop hiccups. A panel was authorized. I sat in on the initial formative meetings. Then the city staffer in charge left for greener pastures and matters stagnated. Mlle. Mayor worked toward a regional human rights commission five years ago. Washoe County said no. Sparks said we can't afford it. (What else is new?) Then came the plague. Today, Reno's commission meets quarterly.

Enter Chief Crawforth who initiated a citizen board as one of his first official acts in Sparks. He is now a finalist for the Reno job and I hope he gets it. In that position, he will be able to set the standard for the region and perhaps the state.


In October, I related the story of disabled Washoe Sheriff's Deputy Kim Frankel, a 16-year officer who became the Olivia Benson of Reno-Sparks. She was very good at sex crimes investigation but was horribly injured in the line of duty and permanently disabled. Some drunk crashed into her cruiser.

The privatized and Orwellianly named "workers compensation" system made her condition worse and permanent because Washoe County refused to pay for her medical care. Why pay when you can throw someone away?
"Insurance" becomes a scam when workers are not compensated.

Detective Frankel is one of many victims of legislative intrigue. Anything to keep business taxes low.

When the Nevada State Industrial Insurance System (SIIS) was privatized in 1993, making a few guys rich, some lobbyist prevailed upon a lawmaker to remove the "bad faith" clause from the law. Without being able to allege bad faith by her employer, in this case Washoe County, Deputy Frankel has no legal recourse. She and her husband lost their home and moved to Oregon to live with relatives.

I am reliably informed that Washoe County Sheriff Darin Baalam never even called, let alone go to bat for one of his people to get her the care she needed.

The treatment delay made her permanently spastic, unable to hold a fork. Just speaking is a hard chore. She has no hope of a cure now and is making it her mission to fix Nevada law.

Hers is not the only case. A North Las Vegas officer has been unable to get care for his heart/lung condition. The same damnable third-party insurance administrator that destroyed Deputy Frankel holds the NLV contract and is apparently just waiting for Lt. Wil Crespo to die.

Assemblymember Jill Dickman, R-Sparks, has submitted a bill draft request to fix the law next year. Sen. Skip Daly, D-Sparks, will co-sponsor the bill in the upper house. Alas and alack,, if help ever arrives, the damage to these officers and countless others will already be irreparable. Stay tuned.

MEMORIES OF MILLS. Former Washoe County District Attorney and Judge Mills Lane, 85, died in Reno on Dec. 6. He did my show in what was perhaps his last TV appearance in 2002. Just a couple of months later, he was permanently disabled by a stroke. He had the misfortune of being stricken while home alone and was not discovered until the next day. By then, irreparable harm was done and he could barely speak for the rest of his life.

Anyone who's lived here awhile has a Mills story. Herewith, a few of mine.

Sahara Tahoe, Stateline, Nevada (21 November 1972) — In what would be his only northern Nevada match, Muhammad Ali squares off against world Light-Heavyweight Champion Bob Foster for the North American Boxing Federation heavyweight title. The referee is future Washoe County DA and District Judge Mills Bee Lane in his first championship fight. Former Golden-Glover Lane (20-1) achieved his own world fame, officiating at dozens more championship bouts. He starred in his own nationally-syndicated television show, Judge Mills Lane, for three years. Ali knocked out Foster in the eighth round but not before Foster became the first opponent to open a cut on the prettiest one's face. Lane gave away copies of TV reporter and now-retired attorney David Kladney's above photo for many years thereafter. The Reno Gazette-Journal used it with Lane's front-page obituary on 12-7-2022.


Barbwire Exclusive
The Day Muhammad Ali and Sir David Frost faced off in Reno
Barbwire by Barbano / Sparks Tribune 9-5-2013

 

EX-CONFIDENCE. Catching a local taxi, a northern Nevada visitor opened a newspaper and asked the cabbie about this guy Lane who had just gotten a nationally syndicated TV show.

"Do you know him?" asked the traveler.

"Yep," said the cabbie. "He sent me up on robbery charges years ago. I've voted for him at every election."

TRIBUNE SUBSCRIPTION, THE HARD (TIME) WAY. Mills subscribed to the Sparks Tribune because he was a Barbwire fan. That's not hype. The straight shooter told me so.

"You stick your chin out there every week and call 'em like you see 'em," he said.

One day, the D.A. came to the old Tribune building at 10th & "C" Streets downtown to renew his subscription and paid with a credit card.
Unfortunately, a new employee stole his info and used it not long thereafter. Big, big mistake. That poor lout's probably still in prison someplace.

KID STUFF. My Number Four Son had just turned 18 and was not at all enthusiastic about showing up to vote. My wife knew how to handle him.
She had introduced him to Mills at a show we did (see below) and he sat with us after our act. The kid became a Mills fan that night.

"You'd feel bad if Mills Lane lost by one vote, wouldn't you?" mom later asked.

He couldn't wait to vote and has never missed an election since.

READY FOR PRIME TIME. Several years before Mills resigned his Washoe District Court seat to become the star of the nationally syndicated "Judge Mills Lane" TV show, my wife, Betty, provided him with show biz experience. A realtor, she was on the committee for the annual Reno-Sparks Association of Realtors fundraiser, a charity benefit stage show at the former Flamingo Hilton Hotel-Casino downtown.

She called Mills and asked if he'd help. He asked for a script so he'd know what he was getting into, so I wrote a skit with my talk radio show as the setting. Some of it never saw the light of day. We got censored by the real estate gods when Betty did a spoof commercial for "Assist to Sue," a combination personal injury law firm and real estate broker.

"When we're done, you won't have to worry about your house anymore because you won't have one," the skit read in part. "We'll take care of everything and you'll see what we mean by broker."

The stuff we were allowed to do got a lot of laughs and Mills got the biggest ovation from the packed showroom, of course.

A few days later, Mills' secretary called Betty. Her boss was astounded by the thank-you card she sent — accompanied by two dozen fresh flowers.

In all his years, apparently no one had ever before sent the D.A. a big bouquet.

That was my Betty. That was Mills Lane.

¡ se puede!

Be well. Raise hell.
/ Esté bien. Haga infierno. (Pardon my Spanglish.)
être bien, élever l'enfer (Pardon my French.) Stammi bene. Scatenare l'inferno. (And Italian.)
__________________
_
Andrew Quarantino Barbano is a 54-year Nevadan and editor of NevadaLabor.com, SenJoeNeal.org, DoctorLawyerWatch.com, BallotBoxing.US, ConsumerCoalitionv.org, ChantalCoalition.org, Rentvolution.org, MIssissippiWestNV.org and CesarChavezNevada.com among others. He is a longtime member of the Reno-Sparks NAACP and Sparks-based Communications Workers of America Local 9413/AFL-CIO. As always, his comments are entirely his own. Barbwire by Barbano has originated in the Sparks Tribune since 1988.

Web Xtras & Smoking Guns—>

Jean Stoess dies at 85
The former Washoe County Commissioner passed away on Dec. 3 according to the December 13 Reno Gazette-Journal. The Barbwire will remember a great public servant in next week's edition.

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$75 dead or alive: Still crazy after all these years
A mass murderer becomes famous on TV a century later

How come nobody noticed 'til now?
Barbwire by Andrew Barbáno
/ Expanded from the 2-21-2018 Sparks Tribune

Triangle Shirtwaist Factory owners Max Blank and Isaac Harris. Is not Mr. Harris eerily familiar to television junkies?

From the Emmy-winning opening slate of the blockbuster "Cheers" television series. Combined with its "Frasier" spinoff, it lasted 20 years.
The "shirtwaist kings" immigrated from Russia and made a fortune manufacturing "Gibson Girl"-style blouses. (Photo, "The American Experience"/PBS)
The Emmy-winning opening slate of the "Cheers" television series before the "slate" of creators is superimposed. Looks like Mr. Harris' dead ringer (at left) is having a bloody good time.

"Who ya gonna believe, me or your own eyes?" Chico Marx disguised as Groucho Marx in "Duck Soup" (1933)
Back to the story of the 1911 Triangle Shirtwaist holocaust

Triangle tragedy recalled as requiem
"The Fire in My Mouth," a new oratorio by Pulitzer honoree Julia Wolfe, premiered with the New York Philharmonic Jan. 24

By Michael Cooper / The New York Times 1-23-2019

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Copyright © 1982-2022 Andrew Barbano

Andrew Barbano is a 53-year Nevadan, editor of NevadaLabor.com and SenJoeNeal.org; and former chair of the City of Reno's Citizens Cable Compliance Committee. He is the executive producer of Nevada's annual César Chávez Day celebration and a longtime member of the Reno-Sparks NAACP. As always, his opinions are strictly his own. E-mail barbano@frontpage.reno.nv.us.

Barbwire by Barbano moved to Nevada's Daily Sparks Tribune on Aug. 12, 1988, and has originated in them parts ever since.
Whom to blame: How a hall-of-famer's hunch birthed the Barbwire in August of 1987
Tempus fugit.

Betty J. Barbano
2-7-1941 / 12-27-2005

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