Saturday, December 17, 2022

Blog Mirror. Today's Document: John Joseph Mathews, Osage Council Member, author, historian, and Rhodes Scholar, seated at home in front of his fireplace, Oklahoma, 12/16/1937.

 

John Joseph Mathews, Osage Council Member, author, historian, and Rhodes Scholar, seated at home in front of his fireplace, Oklahoma, 12/16/1937. “Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs
Series: General Photographs of Indians
”
Image...

John Joseph Mathews, Osage Council Member, author, historian, and Rhodes Scholar, seated at home in front of his fireplace, Oklahoma, 12/16/1937. 

Record Group 75: Records of the Bureau of Indian Affairs

Series: General Photographs of Indians

Image description: Mr. Mathews sits in an armchair in front of a fireplace, with a dog at his feet. The fireplace and walls are made of stone. Next to the fireplace is a table with smoking pipes on it, and a filing cabinet; on the wall is a framed cover of Mathews’ book SUNDOWN. The mantelpiece has candles, framed photos and certificates, and taxidermied animals. The mantel bears the Latin words VENARI LAVARI LUDERE RIDERE OCCAST VIVERE (To hunt, to bathe, to play, to laugh, is to live).

Too good not to repost in its entirety.  

And a great motto!

Thursday, December 17, 1942. The Joint Declaration by Members of the United Nations on the Persecution of the Jews.

The Joint Declaration by the Members of the United Nations on the Persecution of the Jews was issued on this day in 1942, and was read to the members of the House of Commons, who stood thereafter in silence in honor of the victims of the Holocaust.

The declaration stated:
The attention of the Belgian, Czechoslovak, Greek, Jugoslav, Luxembourg, Netherlands, Norwegian, Polish, Soviet, United Kingdom and United States Governments and also of the French National Committee has been drawn to numerous reports from Europe that the German authorities, not content with denying to persons of Jewish race in all the territories over which their barbarous rule has been extended, the most elementary human rights, are now carrying into effect Hitler's oft-repeated intention to exterminate the Jewish people in Europe.

From all the occupied countries Jews are being transported in conditions of appalling horror and brutality to Eastern Europe. In Poland, which has been made the principal Nazi slaughterhouse, the ghettos established by the German invader are being systematically emptied of all Jews except a few highly skilled workers required for war industries. None of those taken away are ever heard of again. The able-bodied are slowly worked to death in labor camps. The infirm are left to die of exposure and starvation or are deliberately massacred in mass executions. The number of victims of these bloody cruelties is reckoned in many hundreds of thousands of entirely innocent men, women and children.

The above-mentioned governments and the French National Committee condemn in the strongest possible terms this bestial policy of cold-blooded extermination. They declare that such events can only strengthen the resolve of all freedom-loving peoples to overthrow the barbarous Hitlerite tyranny. They reaffirm their solemn resolution to insure that those responsible for these crimes shall not escape retribution, and to press on with the necessary practical measures to this end.




The Volga froze to the extent that the Soviets could now resupply Stalingrad without engaging in a river crossing.

20s Charleston Dance - "Charleston" by Enoch Light

Friday, December 16, 2022

Cliffnotes of the Zeitgeist XLI. Cringe


Who the actual hell is going to buy this? Please let me know if you are. One cannot simply laugh hard enough at this showcase of lunacy.
Image

Wednesday, December 16, 1942. The Tatsinskaya Raid.

The Red Army's armored Tatsinskaya Raid commenced on this day.

Reminiscent of Russian cavalry deep raids of World War One, the objective was to draw off German Army forces seeking to breakthrough to Stalingrad by taking the Luftwaffe field at Tatsinskaya.  That goal was achieved, but ultimately at the loss of raiding force.

Saturday, December 16, 1922. Governmental turmoil.

Gabriel Narutowicz, Poland's first President, was murdered after five days in office.  His assassin was modernist painter, Eligiusz Niewiadomski, which gives us a glimpse of just how weird the post World War One era really was.

Australian elections changed the mix of the parliament, but Prime Minister Billy Hughes retained his position.

Senator John Tester is more polite than I am.

He appeared on Meet The Press and Chuck Todd made some reference to how "Governor Dutton" was going to do tonight.

There was a slight awkward pause before Tester picked up on it as a Yellowstone reference.

I haven't seen Yellowstone and I have no reason to believe Tester, whose a farmer from a multigenerational farm family, has either.

Stuff it Chuck.

Thursday, December 15, 2022

Tuesday, December 15, 1942. Battle of Mount Austen, the Galloping Horse, and the Seahorse commences.

The Battle of Mount Austen, the Galloping Horse, and the Seahorse commenced on Guadalcanal.  The action was an American, and Solomon Islander, attack on Japanese positions.


Friday, December 15, 1922. Lenin's health declines.

Cutting a Christmas tree, December 15, 1922.

Vladimir Ilyich Ulyanov, better known to history as Vladimir Lenin, suffered his second stroke during his period of declining health.

Just the day prior, the Soviet government instructed teachers in the regime to teach Santa Claus as a myth.  In the Christmas atmosphere sense, of course, he is, but why Lenin's regime had to go one extra mile to be fun suckers isn't clear.  Apparently murder wasn't enough for them.

Lenin was in a short slide towards death at the time, none of which arrested the progress of destruction in the USSR. Ultimately, his early death would allow the James Dean Effect to apply to him, and he'd escape being recall for being one of the most destructive persons of the 20th Century, which he was. Stalin, a much greater monster who wouldn't have come up but for Lenin, sucked a lot of air out of that room.

Virginia Lamar Robinson, Mrs. Gery Morgan, Eliz. Bryson, 12/15/22

Wednesday, December 14, 2022

Wyoming Catholic Cowboys - raw and real: Snow Day

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"Government Housewives". Sewing, sewing and seamstresses.

American soldier in Cuba in 1898 doing a sewing repair.

We posted this the other day:

Lex Anteinternet: Sunday, December 10, 1922. War Surplus.Rather, I posted it for this big war surplus store advertisement on page 2.  This is the earliest example of this I've seen.

Surplus stores were a feature of my childhood and even young adult years in a major way.  The "War Surplus Store" on 1st Street, on the Sandbar, was a somewhat disorganized collection of stuff guaranteed to fascinate a boy for as long as the boy's parents would allow him to wonder around in it, full of stuff dating back to World War Two.  It's now closed, of course, and instead is the outdoor clothing store Gear Up.

That wasn't Casper's last surplus store, however.  Yates, outside of town, fit that description, and was again fascinating.  It probably closed fifteen or so years ago when its owner relocated to Australian with his Australian wife, figuring that, even as a younger man, that with his savings and Australian social services, he'd no longer have to work.

I hope that worked out.

Laramie had a really small surplus store when I first lived there, but it closed while I lived there in the 80s.  Examples still exist, however.  Jax in Ft. Collins keeps on keeping on, although that's only a small part of its large collection of wares, and Billings retains a good surplus store to this day.

This location is a parking lot today:

A sharp-eyed person (not me) noticed the item about "Government Housewives".

What on earth was that?

It turns out to be a sewing kit issued to soldiers.1

That reveals a set of interesting things.

First of all, sewing repairs were regarded as "women's work".  I frankly don't know, to the extent that anyone does them today, that they still aren't.

I know how to sew for repairs and minor matters.  My mother taught me, and from a young age if buttons needed to be put on my clothes, I did it.  My father knew how to sew as well.  And I'd note that from a military prospective, soldiers had to know how to sew.  I was single while a Guardsman and all the badges, etc., that went on my uniform were put there by me, and they had to be right.

I suspect that the ability to do this was common knowledge while it also being the case that, if women could do it, in the divided labor system that predated the 1970s, they mostly did.

Sixteen-year-old Boston seamstress Helen Anderson, 1917.  She was employed in a commercial shop at this early age.  The good old days.

My mother also knew how to darn socks, which is something that nobody does now, and how to make clothing via a pattern on a sewing machine.  She always had a good sewing machine.  When she died, as I don't know how to use a sewing machine, I gave it to my mother-in-law, who is an excellent seamstress.  The interesting thing here is that my mother gave up making dresses, which is what she had done for herself at one time, when I was pretty young.  My mother-in-law used to make shirts for my father-in-law, but hasn't done that for quite some time.

When I was young this sort of work, seamstress work, was something associated with women.  Now it's practically simply a lost art, by my observation.  When my kids received letters in high school athletics, I had to hunt high and low to find somebody to put the letters on.  I did, but interestingly the woman who did it was a Mexican immigrant, and likely learned the craft in her native country.

When I had to have a zipper installed on my Carhartt coat, which of course indicates that I'm too cheap to replace a coat that's otherwise serviceable but which has a broken zipper, I had a canvass shop here in town do it for me.

That's interesting for a couple of reasons, one being is that I had to think outside the box to get the repair done.  My mother's sewing basket had zippers in it, which means that she was making that repair from time to time. That's beyond me, quite frankly.

I learned that it's beyond me as I tried to find a zipper for a pair of  Army field pants.  I like field pants, which are pants that go over other pants, although I usually just press Army trousers into that role. Somewhere I found a pair of genuine field pants of the old OD type and bought them.  But the zipper is shot. It probably broke when the trousers were new, as they're nearly new.  I thought I could replace it, but finding the right size zipper has been a chore.  It didn't use to be.


Anyhow, I don't know how many clothing repairs people actually make anymore.  Fewer than they used to.

Another sewing occupation, that of tailor, seemed to be a male job.  When I was first practicing law, there was an elderly tailor here in town with a small shop right next to the Federal Courthouse.  Now, that's closed and given his age, 30 years ago, he's almost certainly passed on. With the closure of the shop, the craft here closed with him.

Isidore Rubinoff, 1943, tailor for a Greyhound bus lines garage. Greyhound kept a series of such shops in an era when formal dressing was more important than it now is.  Rubinoff is wearing a Greyhound tie chain.

The degree to which people had clothing tailored has changed enormously.

It's not as if I frequented tailors at one time, to any great degree, but it did used to be the case that if you bought a good suit, it probably received some "alterations" to fit just right.  That was the difference between going into a good men's shop and buying a suit and getting one "off the rack".  An "off the rack" suit isn't going to fit quite right. There's a real difference.

Places like Brook's Brothers had tailors working in the stores.  Now, it tends to be the case that somebody will take your measurements, and it'll be shipped off somewhere.  And this with suits.

Even into the 1970s, as odd as it may seem now, tailoring was so common that even enlisted soldiers used to have Class B and fatigue uniforms tailored on occasion.  Not all by any means, but quite a few.  I recall my uncle noting that about his induction cycle in 1958, noting that a lot of the same soldiers couldn't fit in those uniforms several months later, as the physical activity of basic training passed away.  I don't know when this became a thing of the past for the Army, but it nearly, but not completely, was when I was a Guardsman in the 1980s.  It was more common in the Marine Corps.  I'll bet it's gone nearly completely now.

So here we have an interesting trend, or rather several trends.  

And one of them again has to do with the division of labor.  Back in an era when clothes were more expensive, mending them was more common, and while both sexes did it, it fell more to women than men.  This wasn't part of the "patrimony", it had to do with the tightness of resources.

But more than that was going on, and to we really need to take a look back even further to really appreciate the change.

Which we'll do next. . . 

Footnotes:

1. Apparently they were still issued into the 1970s, although by that time they'd required an off color nickname.


Monday, December 14, 1942. Buna taken by the Allies, the USS Nevada at sea, Ethiopia declares war.


Today in World War II History—December 14, 1942: US and Australian troops occupy Buna, New Guinea. On sub USS Grayback in the Bismarck Islands, an appendectomy is performed by a pharmacist's mate.
Reports Sarah Sundin.

Ethiopia declared war on Germany, Italy and Japan.  

The country had lost a bitter war against the Italians prior to World War Two, the Second Italo-Ethiopian War, but then was liberated by the British Army in 1941, after which the remaining Italian forces launched a forgotten guerilla war that continued on into 1943, ending with the Italian surrender to the Allies.

Ethiopian head of state, Emperor Haile Selassie I at Jubilee Palace in 1942.

Royal Navy cruiser Argonaut was torpedoed and heavily damaged in the Mediterranean by Italian submarine Mocenigo.

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Tuesday, December 13, 2022

A new spin on the story.

 So the letter written by the legislators now surfaces.  Here it is:

This does shed a new light on it, that being that a person with male DNA is apparently living in a sorority, and also having already revealed his own name, according to his, publicly in celebration of being admitted into a sorority.

Rev. Schmidt's approach, as previously noted, was guaranteed not to solve this problem, but frankly it is a sign of how disordered and illusional our society has become that this is all going on, and it makes hsi approach less aggressive than it otherwise seemed.  The press didn't do a good job on reporting the background on this matter, which would presumably have started with the significant fact that a genetically male person, made to have a female appearance, most likely, only through the aid of pharmaceuticals, was living in housing reserved for women.  There is reason to be concerned about a person with male DNA living in female housing, and likewise the "explore" your sexuality comment is concerning.  And with the added information, Rev. Schmidt did not reveal the name, but rather referenced it, the name having already been revealed by the individual himself, apparently.

At some later era, people will look back on this one as exhibiting a certain sort of insanity on all sorts of things.  This will come after all the lawsuits on the topic, which is undoubtedly coming.

Lex Anteinternet: Just another day in the Big Top

Lex Anteinternet: Just another day in the Big Top: Lex Anteinternet: How to loose friends, make enemies, make a bad arg... : Our friend here again.  As we previoulsy noted, a Morganucodon, ou...
And now we hear from a noted law commentator, as reported in the electronic Cowboy State Daily.
Limited Public Forum  

The policy UW used to justify its action may not be enough from a First Amendment standpoint, Eugene Volokh, First Amendment professor at the University of California, Los Angeles, told Cowboy State Daily. 

The author of the textbook “The First Amendment and Related Statutes,” Volokh specializes in First Amendment law.   

Government entities like the university are not constitutionally obligated to allow various kinds of speech within their buildings, Volokh said. However, once the entity decides to hold a public forum, the First Amendment right to free speech then extends to people inside the building, though it may be limited by the entity’s existing policies.   

Those policies must be specific and viewpoint neutral, said Volokh, adding that the tabling policy UW referenced in Schmidt’s suspension letter appears too vague to justify suspending his tabling privileges. 

Well as noted by this noted law commentator:

3. There might be a lesson in here in what happens when you convert a building from what was essentially offices, ancillary rooms and a bookstore into one that's a place for loitering of all types.