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Opera/Classical

NYCO Box Office

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#1 of 4

     Posted Nov-5 10:00 AM   
Len Goran
 
From  Len Goran  Posts 294  Last 1:06 AM
To  All      [Msg # 90995.1 ]    
Well the NYCO is just a shell of its former self but I still managed to get tickets for Esther on Nov 13--the work going on all around Lincoln Center is just humongous--when will it end.  And even up a few blocks next to Ollie's tremendous work going on! Regards, Len [g]

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#2 of 4

     Posted Nov-6 12:36 AM   
Bill Pearce
 
From  Bill Pearce  Posts 597  Last 12:21 AM
To  Len Goran      [Msg # 90995.2 Message 90995.2 replying to 90995.1 90995.1 ]    

It sounds like a government project, Len.  We always chuckle here at government construction projects (federal or state) -- there usually seem to be about three supervisors (i.e. watchers rather than workers) to every worker.

     Bill

 

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#3 of 4

     Posted Nov-6 7:31 AM   
Len Goran
 
From  Len Goran  Posts 294  Last 1:06 AM
To  Bill Pearce      [Msg # 90995.3 Message 90995.3 replying to 90995.2 90995.2 ]    
>It sounds like a government project, Len<

Bill, LOL--I guess they'll finish it sometime?  Regards, Len
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#4 of 4

     Posted Nov-6 9:07 AM   
Edward A. Cowan
 
From  Edward A. Cowan  Posts 2033  Last 5:20 AM
To  Bill Pearce      [Msg # 90995.4 Message 90995.4 replying to 90995.2 90995.2 ]    
» ... there usually seem to be about three supervisors (i.e. watchers rather than workers) to every worker. «

There you have the essence of bureaucracy. Long ago (1944), Ludwig von Mises, in his little book Bureaucracy (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1944, repr. New Rochelle NY: Arlington House, 1969) found that, essentially, bureaucracies exist not to get anything done, but rather to see to it that the rules are followed. Mises' book was about the functional identity of the political systems of Stalin and Hitler, the latter having "borrowed" the essentials from the former but adding his own political twist. A friend of mine long ago regularly referred to East Germany (Deutsche Demokratische Republik) as the "German bureaucratic republic" ("Deutsche Bürokratische Republik"), since there, too, the system was as before, but red instead of brown. This friend also put a twist upon the constant police presence in East Germany, claiming that they always came in threes, one who could read, another who could write, and a third to keep an eye on those two intellectuals.

--E.A.C.
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Opera/Classical

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