
Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Thursday, October 2, 2014
In Praise of the Dutch Oven

Wednesday, October 1, 2014
Commentary on Career Advice. Caveat Auctor.
Finally, career impetus varies by generation, something that I've heard made as a career observation in different careers more than once, but which really matters for a person's view. People who grew up in the Great Depression (now mostly retired) tended to have very strong views about the simple value of work over everything else, and I've actually noted the same thing with people who came of age here in the 1970s and 1980s. Work became so tight, that the simple concept of actually having a job dominated over everything else, and to many of those people, that's still true. So, they'll heavily value an occupation in which there has been steady work and are often amazed by younger generations that do not. By the same extension, people who came of age in the Great Depression often have very distinct ideas about the concept of dignity in professions, conceiving of it as its own reward, but are also very accepting of class distinctions. They also will sometimes value distinctions over income, and because they started working in booming economies after World War Two, they also tend to think that a person will become a financial success because they will. The Boomer Generation that came of age in the 1960s and often started careers in the 1970s, however, is ironically (given their Hippie reputation) often highly money oriented and have had the impact of converting careers, in some instances, into very money centric businesses.
In contrast to this, the generations that started entering the work force in the mid 1990s and every sense tends to value work place stability and career longevity not at all, and it also sometimes seems comfortable with money being pretty fluid. One thing that lawyers my age and older tend to note is that new lawyers quit jobs and even the entire practice of law fairly frequently, fairly often, and fairly early. This has lead to the claim that that generation is lazy, but it isn't. It just is looking for something else. For those sorts of people, freedom in fluidity must be pretty important, and if they're talking to an older generation, they might want to consider that that wasn't important, or not even admired, in earlier eras.
Thursday, October 1, 1914. Carranza suggests a meeting and the Battle of Arras starts.
Venustiano Carranza called on revolutionary leaders to meet for convention in Mexico City,
The Battle of Arras began with a French assault on German positions.
Canadian William Lyon Mackenzie King, a future Prime Minister, and then director for the Rockefeller Foundation since June, was assigned to head an inquiry the Colorado mining strife of 1914.
Last edition:
Wednesday, September 30, 1914. A World War.
Mid Week At Work: Bad Advice
Tuesday, September 30, 2014
Lex Anteinternet: The Poster Gallery: Posters from World War Two.
Lex Anteinternet: The Poster Gallery: Posters of World War One.
Wednesday, September 30, 1914. A World War.
The British Indian Army Expeditionary Force A arrived at Marseille for service in the Ypres Salient.
French forces arrived at Arras in an attempt to outflank the Germans.
The seaplane tender Wakamiya was damaged by a naval mine.
Governor of Indiana Frank Hanly established the Flying Squadron of America to promote the temperance movement.
Last edition:
Monday, September 28, 1914.
Food: Seasonal, local, and from the grocery store. A revolution we don't often recognize.
I've always thought that there should also be something about seasonality to how a person eats.
There's something about that first asparagus in early spring, digging new potatoes out of the garden, peaches in summer, or venison in the fall that makes you appreciate it more than just going to the store and buying whatever you want whenever you want.
Eating a fresh-picked peach (if you can find one) in December doesn't seem quite the same as eating yourself sick on home-grown peaches in July.

If we stop and think about this for a moment, the nature of it is really amazing. We receive vegetables from hundreds of miles, even thousands of miles away. Lettuce is harvested in California, or northern Mexico, and transported to grocery stores all over North America. That required a pretty amazing transportation system, which the case of the United States is entirely dependent upon highway using trucks. Or consider oranges, which we can now get year around. Oranges are harvested in Texas, or Florida, or Belize and taken by, perhaps, ships to one spot, and then trucked to far distant points, and yet they are still affordable.
That they are still affordable is in and of itself amazing. Each bears a fractional share of the transportation costs, and yet that turns out to be quite small in the end. Of course, some of the costs are borne indirectly, such as the costs of maintaining and building the highways, but still it comes out pretty cheaply. Its so efficient in fact that even if the environmental costs are added in, according to Freakanomics, it still comes out ahead of at least some alternative options.
This is a revolution that's hard for us to appreciate today, but its truly an amazing one. I'm not saying, of course, that a person shouldn't till their own soil, and I've maintained substantial gardens of my own in the past, and my father always did. Growing your own was its own reward, and the taste of freshly grown is indeed better from that grown long distances away. And there's something to be said for maintaining local agriculture, the loss of which is disturbing on multiple levels. Rather, what we note here is the change itself, which has been enormous.
Monday, September 29, 2014
Business Machines of Antiquity.
Monday at the Bar: Lawyers Office, Dover Deleware, 1940s.
The Big Picture: Cambrai, 1919
Sunday, September 28, 2014
Monday, September 28, 1914.
Sunday Morning Scene

From Churches of the West: Cathedral of the Madeline, Salt Lake City Utah: where there is more on the same..
Saturday, September 27, 2014
Sunday, September 27, 1914. Cossack barbarity.
German forces forced back the French around the River Somme near Albert.
Belgian volunteers encountered German troops at Buggenhout, but retreated in the end to Mol.
The Russians forced back the Germans at Osowiec Fortress.
Cossacks attacked Jewish residents in Lwów, causing 40 civilian casualties.
Last edition:
Saturday, September 26, 1914. FTC created.
Friday, September 26, 2014
Saturday, September 26, 1914. FTC created.
The Federal Trade Commission was established by the Federal Trade Commission Act.
Modern populists probably regard it as government overreach, as they seemingly think everything is in their ignorance.
Belgian infantry and cavalry attempted to cut off the retreating German Landwehr but failed to do so at Buggenhout.
German South West African troops defeated troops of the Union of South Africa at the Battle of Sandfontein in Namibia.
Last edition:
Friday, September 25, 1914. Battle of Buggenhout.
Friday Farming: Sheepherder, 1940s
Thursday, September 25, 2014
Student Revolt in Jefferson County, Colorado
Well, in part, getting a walk out rolling in nice weather probably isn't as hard as it might seem, but beyond that the protests are focused on the following, according to the Denver Post:
Community members are angry about an evaluation-based system for awarding raises to educators and a proposed curriculum committee that would call for promoting "positive aspects" of the United States.I'm not sure what an "evaluation based system for awarding raises to educators" actually means. That's vague enough that, without further explanaion, it'd be hard to know what they're talking about really. As for the curriculum, the post reports the following:
The curriculum proposal, crafted by board member Julie Williams, calls for a nine-member panel to "review curricular choices for conformity to JeffCo academic standards, accuracy and omissions," and present information accurately and objectively.
Interesting how this has worked. The students apparently are offended and feel that they're going to be fed propaganda, and are reacting. So, accidentally, the materials are resulting in civil disorder and social strife.
Williams' proposal calls for instructional material presenting "positive aspects" of U.S. heritage that "promote citizenship, patriotism, essentials and benefits of the free enterprise system, respect for authority and respect for individual rights." Materials should not, it says, "encourage or condone civil disorder, social strife or disregard of the law."
Logic would or should dictate that students just get the straight scoop on stuff, whatever that is, science, history, or whatever. In recent years that has always been the case, on the political right or the political left. At least in Jefferson County, students appear to have taken note to some extent.
Of course, the nice weather doesn't hurt either.