Troubled Times.

AuthorKnoll, Erwin
Position'In These Times' magazine financial woes - Editorial

July 23, 1983, was - as I wrote in this space at the time - a red-letter day in the annals of organized (or disorganized) athletics. It was the occasion of the First Annual Softball Grudge Match and Solidarity Celebration between the staffs of In These Times, the Chicago-based alternative biweekly, and The Progressive.

"First annual" was a bit of bravado on my part; neither publication was financially robust, and The Progressive faced a particularly severe crunch. Anyone who might have looked at our books that Saturday afternoon would have been entitled to conclude that the odds were against a second annual softball match.

In fact, a headline in The New York Times the next day - Sunday, July 24, 1983 - proclaimed, Financial Problems Imperil Progressive Magazine. The story got a lot of play around the country. A headline in the St. Paul Pioneer-Press read, Progressive Magazine on |Deathbed,' and the Philadelphia Inquirer announced, Progressive Magazine May Fold. Some of the papers that reported our imminent demise have since gone out of business.

Still, there's no doubt that it was the most acute financial crisis we had experienced since 1947, when a lack of money actually forced The Progressive to suspend publication for several months. But the gloomy outlook in the summer of '83 didn't dampen our enthusiasm - on the softball diamond or in The Progressive's business and editorial offices. We won both softball games that Saturday afternoon, and we went on to overcome our cash-flow emergency. On Saturday, August 21, 1993, the staff of In These Times traveled to Madison for the Eleventh Annual Softball Grudge Match and Solidarity Celebration.

(For a long time I thought the ITT-Progressive game was a unique institution on the Left, but I've learned that Britain's Fabian Society plays an annual cricket match against the leftist New Statesman & Society. One recent encounter was stopped by rain, but Fabian News reported that "NSS batted first and made 147 with Fabian Society 83-7." I have no idea what that means, but it sounds a lot like some of the grotesque scores In These Times and The Progressive have been known to rack up in softball.)

The latest softball encounter was, as they all have been, a joyous occasion. The Madison weather was wonderful. There were kids and grownups, beer and brats, home-run sluggers and enthusiastic bench warmers. The Progressive won the first game of a doubleheader and In These Times won...

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