The Constitutionalist government in Mexico City announced a plan to bring about victory over Zapata.
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Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
The Constitutionalist government in Mexico City announced a plan to bring about victory over Zapata.
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Distributist of the world unite! National Small Business Saturday.
Section 1. Medal established
The Medal of Freedom is hereby reestablished as the Presidential Medal of Freedom, with accompanying ribbons and appurtenances. The Presidential Medal of Freedom, hereinafter referred to as the Medal, shall be in two degrees.
Sec. 2. Award of the Medal.
(a) The Medal may be awarded by the President as provided in this order to any person who has made an especially meritorious contribution to (1), the security or national interests of the United States, or (2) world peace, or (3) cultural or other significant public or private endeavors.
(b) The President may select for award of the Medal any person nominated by the Board referred to in Section 3(a) of this Order, any person otherwise recommended to the President for award of the Medal, or any person selected by the President upon his own initiative.
(c) The principal announcement of awards of the Medal shall normally be made annually, on or about July 4 of each year; but such awards may be made at other times, as the President may deem appropriate.
(d) Subject to the provisions of this Order, the Medal may be awarded posthumously.
By virtue of the authority vested in me as President of the United States and as Commander in Chief of the Army and Navy of the United States, it is hereby ordered as follows:
- There is hereby established a medal to be known as the Medal of Freedom with accompanying ribbons and appurtenances for award to any person, not hereinafter specifically excluded, who, on or after December 7, 1941, has performed a meritorious act or service which has aided the United States in the prosecution of a war against an enemy or enemies and for which an award of another United States medal or decoration is considered inappropriate.
- The Medal of Freedom may also be awarded to any person, not hereinafter specifically excluded, who, on or after December 7, 1941, has similarly aided any nation engaged with the United States in the prosecution of a war against a common enemy or enemies.
- The Medal of Freedom shall not be awarded to a citizen of the United States for any act or service performed within the continental limits of the United States or to a member of the armed forces of the United States.
- The Medal of Freedom and appurtenances thereto shall be of appropriate design, approved by the Secretary of State, the Secretary of War, and the Secretary of the Navy, and may be awarded by the Secretary of State, the Secretary of War, or the Secretary of the Navy, or by such officers as the said Secretaries may respectively designate. Awards shall be made under such regulations as the said Secretaries shall severally prescribe and such regulations shall, insofar as practicable, be of uniform application.
- No more than one Medal of Freedom shall be awarded to any one person, but for a subsequent act or service justifying such an award a suitable device may be awarded to be worn with the medal.
- The Medal of Freedom may be awarded posthumously.
As a recording and touring artist, James Taylor has touched people with his warm baritone voice and distinctive style of guitar-playing for more than 40 years, while setting a precedent to which countless young musicians have aspired. Over the course of his celebrated songwriting and performing career, Taylor has sold more than 100 million albums, earning gold, platinum and multi-platinum awards for classics ranging from Sweet Baby James in 1970 to October Road in 2002. In 2015 Taylor released Before This World, his first new studio album in thirteen years, which earned him his first ever #1 album. He has won multiple Grammy awards and has been inducted into both the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and the prestigious Songwriters Hall of Fame.
It was a Saturday.
Country Gentleman had an illustration of a white turkey, but I can't find a good image of it to post.
The British government introduced legislation to restrict housing rents to their pre Great War levels following Glasgow rent strikes.
A second KKK chapter was established in Stone Mountain, Georgia, showing the rapid growth of the racist organization. Of note, a newspaper in Colorado that was black owned and operated campaigned on this day for keeping Birth of a Nation out of Colorado.
In Casper, a tragedy struck the local Catholic community with the death of Fr. McGee, who was just 27 years old.
The local paper also reported that troops were headed to the border in light of the Second Battle of Nogales having just occured.
A rather grim photograph was taken of French soldiers gathering up battlefield dead, French and German.
Weather at Gallipoli continued to be bad.
The Great Blizzard at Gallipoli
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over 40% of Americans have a college degree, while only 30% of the Swiss do. Are the Swiss international slackers? Probably not. Indeed, we have more people with college degrees than the United Kingdom, Denmark Belgium, Australia, Germany, France, Sweden, Norway, South Korean and Finland do. We are on par with New Zealand and Japan and really only Russia and Canada have a true statistically greater percentage of their populations that are college educated. So it sure isn't the case that we aren't sending people to college.In other words, maybe European kids ought to be protesting that something in their system is keeping people from getting degrees.
Therefore, if measured in terms of the sheer number of people in the population who have degrees, we beat out every country except for Canada and Russia, which is pretty impressive on some level.
One of the topics that's been kicking around the GOP Presidential race is that of student loans. At least one candidate, Ron Paul, says he wants to phase them out altogether.I wouldn't be in favor of that, but I really do think that the entire topic needs to be revisited, as it's helping to fund failure, and has a weird impact on our economy. This is the reason why.Generally, student loans are a government backed system in which private young individuals receive funding for university or college irrespective of the needs of the economy, or the wisdom of their choice. I'm not suggesting, of course, that we should override the choices of individuals who make study choices that are not likely to advance our collective economic well-being, but I do feel that it's a bad economic choice to fund them.Students of the history of student loans often point out that they've been a boost to the American economy, which is somewhat true, but which really confuses the loans with the GI Bill, which was an outright grant. At any rate, what they fail to note is that the early post World War Two American economy was such that that the student population(largely male) was unlikely to be study something that wasn't directly usable in the work sphere, and that having a college degree in the 1945 to 1975 time frame was rare enough that nearly any college degree could translate into business utility. Neither of those factors is true today. Indeed, at this point in time college degrees have become socommon that a lot of them have no economic value to their holders at all.
This is not to say that pursing a college degree is worthless. That would hardly be true. But if the government is to back the study of something, it ought to be something useful to the nation as a whole. Not something that's likely to have no use to the nation, and which moreover is likely to have no real value to the holder in later economic terms.
As an example of this, which I've already noted here, one of the protesters at the Wall Street occupation was reported to have a $90,000 student loan for the study of art. Why would the nation help fund this. If she wants to study art, the more power to her, I just don't want to help. In economic terms, this isn't going to help the nation at all, and frankly she'll be really lucky if she ever fines a job. By funding her, we've made ourselves poorer and, chances are, her too.
What I'd propose to do is to restrict funding to areas where we really feel we need to boost the nation's educated populace. If we're weak in the sciences or engineering, that's what I'd fund. Other areas where we need new workers, who need an education to obtain it, would likewise be eligible for loans. I wouldn't bother funding art students, or literature students. That doesn't mean their studies are unimportant culturally, or personally, but rather if they are important, it's in a manner that cannot be economically judged, and therefore people shouldn't be taxed to help fund it. Law is the same way. The nation has a vast oversupply of lawyers and I can't see any good reason to give a person a loan to study that.
I don't think that this would mean these other fields would dry up by any means. But it probably would mean that a lot of people who don't qualify for private scholarships and who don't otherwise have the means of obtaining such a degree would do something else. Frankly, however, that would be a good thing, as by funding the non economic, we're fueling the hopes of a lot of people who aren't going to be able to find employment later.
And, no, I didn't have any student loans, thanks to the National Guard and my parents.
A very interesting NPR Talk of the Nation episode on Student Loans.Since I posted these items, this has been more in the news than ever. And a lot of that has to do with the combined impact of student protests as well as Democratic Senator Bernie Saunders suggesting that he cause their to be free college for all.
What is so interesting about this, I think, is that there's at least one caller who emails in with complaints about how the burden of loans caused her to take a career she didn't want, Wildlife Management, over one she did, Veterinary school, as she couldn't afford the loans. She then goes on to blame the burden of servicing her loans for living far from her family, and for not having any children.
The other thing that is is interesting is that a few callers have no sympathy at all with those complaining about their loans.
I'm afraid I'm in that camp, the one without sympathy. Choosing a career you don't want, just because the loans are cheaper, is stupid. Beyond that, avoiding real life, to service loans, is as well.
This probably says something, however, about the current nature of our societal view towards education. Why must we go this route? We don't have to, we're choosing too. And now, a large section of the population views paying for the loans they obtained for their education as unfair, when nobody asked them to get the loans in the first place.
Not that society cannot be blamed to some degree. We've created a culture where we now view manual labor as demeaning, and teach our middle class children that. The grandsons of machinist and tool and die makers feel they must go to college, and indeed they must as we sent the tool and die work to China, more or less intentionally. So we're now all over-educated, and can't pay for it with the jobs we retained. And we encourage this to continue on by giving loans for educational pursuits we know will never pay off.
Villista's commenced firing on U.S. troops across the border in Nogales, Arizona, from Nogales, Sonora. The 12th Infantry responded with counter fire in an engagement that lasted over two hours until Constitutionalistas troops arrived and attacked the Villistas.
Villa's troops had been attempting to withdraw from Nogales but had their efforts frustrated with Obregon's troops captured a troop train they were using. The Villista firing into Nogales started after that. Some U.S. forces crossed into Mexico during the fight, prior ro the arrival of Obregon's troops. Later in the day, the 10th Cavalry engaged in a 30 minute firefight with the Constitutionalistas.
Bad weather set in at Gallipoli, adding to the misery and to Allied casualties.
Other news of the day:
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It was Thanksgiving Day in the U.S.
It apparently was a tense one on the the border.
Serbian Field Marshal Radomir Putnik ordered a retreat of Serbian forces military through Albania and Montenegro. 155,000 Serbian soldiers and civilians to escape to the Adriatic Sea, but an estimated 200,000 more died of exposure, starvation and attacks by enemy soldiers and local Albanian militia.
Parliament passed an act to restrict rent and mortgage rate increases during the ongoing war.
Albert Einstein submitted his paper 'The Field Equations of Gravitation' for publication in 1915, which gave the correct field equations for the theory of general relativity. German mathematician David Hilbert had submitted an article containing the correct field equations for general relativity five days before.
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Both sides withdrew in the Battle of Ctesiphon.
Pristina fell to the Bulgarians.
William Joseph Simmons, inspired Birth of a Nation, founded the second variant of the Ku Klux Klan at Stone Mountain, Georgia. The event included the burning of a cross, something the original Klan did not do, but which the film had depicted.
Simmons would run the organization until 1922, at which point he'd be removed from power The organization reached its peak membership in 1925, and declined thereafter due to scandal.
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Lex Anteinternet: Toyota Landcruiser: The Prime Mover of the Third ...: Moroccan troops with some sort of Toyota, United States Marine Corps photograph. Americans may have invented the Jeep , but based o...And now, it appears, there's a little competition in this category.
Lex Anteinternet: More of the Stone Ranch: This is posted over on our photo site, as Holscher's Hub: More of the Stone Ranch. It is an historic structure, but its the very astut...
Thanks, I have long been fascinated by how little space was needed only a few generations ago. Stage travelers probably were in a corner cot behind a curtain. Today a 1,200 sq foot home is sold as small, or as a starter home. Would have been more than spacious in the 1880s.
That's very true.
I know that the original occupants of the house had a family and raised several children there. At least one of their children went on to marry and raise another family there, after the stage days were over. As time went on the outbuildings and what not were put in, but they continued to live in the small house. I don't know when the house ceased to be occupied, but I think it was in the 1940s or 1950s.
This house is smaller then modern apartments today. But, on the other hand, it was stone, cut by an itinerant Italian stone mason, and it was probably really easy to heat in the winter with its small size. Likewise, the windows and stone construction probably would have made it tolerable during the summer.