Ostensibly exploring the practice of law before the internet. Heck, before good highways for that matter.
Saturday, August 16, 2014
A second look at one of this season's bad political ideas. "Taking back" the Federal land
Sunday, August 16, 1914. Not going according to plan.
The Germans took the last of Belgium's military forts after an eleven day effort which was supposed to have taken two.
Serbian forces pushed the Austro Hungarians off of Cer Mountain.
The Austro Hungarian battle cruiser SMS Zenta was sunk by the Allies in the Adriatic.
The SMS Goeben and Breslau were transferred to the Ottoman Navy.
British 2nd Lt. Evelyn Perry of the Royal Flying Corps was killed in a plane crash over France, making him the first British office to die in the war.
John Redmond, in a public address in Maryborough, Ireland, stated to assembled Irish Volunteers:
[F]or the first time in the history ... it was safe to-day for England to withdraw her armed troops from our country and that the sons of Ireland themselves ... [would] defend her shores against any foreign foe.
He was really pushing his point.
The Polish Temporary Commission of Confederated Indepence Parties in Austro Hungaria formed the Polish Supreme National Committee.
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Saturday, August 15, 1914. The Panama Canal opens for traffic.
Friday, August 15, 2014
Saturday, August 15, 1914. The Panama Canal opens for traffic.
The Panama Canal opened for traffic.
The SS Ancon, pictured above on this day, was the first ship through.
Theodore Roosevelt, who would only have been in his 60s, who had caused it to be built, didn't live to see the great event. Neither did Woodrow Wilson, who had carried through with it. William H. Taft, however, remained very much alive.
Sgt. Patrick N. Cullom of the Colorado National Guard testified that the soliders in his company had shot and killed Union activist Louis Tikas and two others at Ludlow. He testified they were attempting to escape at the time.
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Friday, August 14, 1914. First bombing raid.
Thursday, August 14, 2014
Friday, August 14, 1914. First bombing raid.
The French First Army advanced on German forces near Sarrebourg, Lorraine, France.
Albanian rebels attacked Durrës, the capital of Albania, but were driven back by Romanian volunteer forces, showing how confusing the Great War already was.
The first real bomber, the the French Voisin III, made its first combat run. An attack on German airship hangars at Metz-Frescaty Air Base in Germany.
The Austro Hungarian steamer SS Baron Gautsch struck a mine off of Croatia and sank, killing 150 passengers.
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Tuesday, August 13, 1914. The Teoloyucan Treaties
Wednesday, August 13, 2014
Tuesday, August 13, 1914. The Teoloyucan Treaties
Álvaro Obregón signed one of the documents related to dissolving the Mexican regime and allowing leaders of the Constitutionalist to create a new government.
The Austro Hungarian troopship SMS Baron Gautsch struck an Austrian mine in the Adriatic and sank, killing 147 men.
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Wednesday, August 12, 1914. The United Kingdom and France declare war on Austro Hungaria.
Tuesday, August 12, 2014
On Robin Williams
Richard CoryBy Edwin Arlington Robinson
The news today is full of stories and attributes on Robin Williams, who killed himself yesterday. Apparently he was battling depression and had a history of addictions, which probably were part and parcel of each other.
Whenever Richard Cory went down town,We people on the pavement looked at him:He was a gentleman from sole to crown,Clean favored, and imperially slim.
And he was always quietly arrayed,And he was always human when he talked;But still he fluttered pulses when he said,"Good-morning," and he glittered when he walked.
And he was rich—yes, richer than a king—And admirably schooled in every grace:In fine, we thought that he was everythingTo make us wish that we were in his place.
So on we worked, and waited for the light,And went without the meat, and cursed the bread;And Richard Cory, one calm summer night,Went home and put a bullet through his head
The last time a celebrity was noted here upon that person's death, which is probably the only time a celebrity has been noted here due to death, was when Richard Seymour Hoffman died due to a drug overdose, and my entry at that time wasn't really sympathetic. I tend not to credit too much the stories of pressure and angst associated with the performing arts, as I don't think they compare to those born by the unknown and average, who often have tremendous burdens. In other words, I don't worry too much about the fame and its burdens that the famous have, as I don't think it's quite the same as being a blue collar worker in Detroit worrying about his job and his family.
But I do feel different about Williams, who seemed a fragile character in some ways, and a real one in other ways.
I wasn't an early fan of Williams, but I did start liking his work about the time he appeared in Good Morning Vietnam, and his performance in Good Will Hunting, ironically as a psychologist, was brilliant. Perhaps that role, more than any other, showed his vulnerability and tapped into a completely non comedic serious role. Unfortunately Williams could portray the deeply insightful but troubled psychologist in that movie, but apparently take no comfort from it.
I don't know what it was that was so deeply troubling to Williams, and frankly for those very seriously disturbed, nobody really can. But I note what was noted so long ago by the poem Richard Corey, set out above. I don't want to be seen to be excusing his suicide, but it can be the case that a person who seemingly has everything, does not feel that way himself. And for those oppressed with the often heavy, but ordinary burdens of everyday life, things are often much better than they might appear.
Economic Ignorance and the American electorate
Wednesday, August 12, 1914. The United Kingdom and France declare war on Austro Hungaria.
The United Kingdom and her Dominions declared war on Austro Hungaria.
So did France.
Belgian troops repulsed German cavalry at the Battle of Halen.
Karl von Müller, commander of the German light cruiser SMS Emden, met with Imperial German Navy Admiral Maximilian von Spee at Pagan, Mariana Islands. In the meeting he learned that Impertial Japan was gravitating towards the United Kingdom and tracking down German squadrons in the Pacific. The Emden was ordered to remain in the Pacific as a raider.
Interim Mexican president Francisco Carvajal formally left Mexico City for Veracruz, allowing the Constitutional Army to enter the city.
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Monday, August 10, 1914. Austro Hungaria takes the field against Imperial Russia.
Monday, August 11, 2014
The Not So Great Gatsby
This story is lame in the extreme.
Why do people like it.
It may be just me, but I strongly suspect that there's a class of literature that is preserved mostly because it was regarded as super interesting, or super avant garde, or something, at the time it was written, and otherwise has very little merit. I'd put James Joyce in that category, frankly. His work is still read as somebody way back in blushed when they read it, and that made his reputation. Now he's foisted off on university students and the volumes keep selling for that reason.
Same thing with most Hemingway. Oh, some of his works are good, but are badly written and boring. Yes, I said that. Badly written and boring. Using a complete economy of words is a writing attribute a lot of children have and doesn't make you a great writer.
J. D. Salinger is not that great either. I'm pretty convinced his works live on simply because university literature professors convince thier charges that the work is good, because somebody told them that, so in turn those graduates enter high school English departments and foist Salinger off on young minds, who know better.
And so it is with The Great Gatsby.
This story is just stupid. Suspension of reality aside, are we really to believe that Gatsby rises from a poor discharged officer to a super fantastically uber super duper humongously fantastically wealthy person in a few years simply through his own titanic (and illegal) activities just to impress Daisy Buchanan. Oh come on.
And why would anyone with a brain be interested in Daisy Buchanan, at least as she's portrayed on film. She's boring beyond belief. She's as dull as a toast sandwich made up of two slices of toast, with a piece of toast in between. Dull.
Perhaps, of course, she's not quite such a paler shade of dull in print.
The golfing lady is more interesting however.
And is a person whose grasp on morality is so poor that he helps set up his married cousin in a tryst with a man involved in criminal activity really that interesting as a protagonist?
I don't care what literature profs say about this one, this story is lame.
Credit where credit is due, good op eds from the Star Tribune
Earlier this spring, I had a discussion with a teacher friend who told me that she and most of her friends opposed the $33 million school construction bond because it was generally a “waste” of their tax dollars. As a reminder, the failed bond would have paid for, among other things, academy equipment, safety improvements, and the construction of a new science and technology center. It was clear to me that this lady and her friends had zero command of the facts, nor did they evince any understanding of the impact of their yes/no vote. It was striking given that this comment came from the people that had the most to gain or lose by the outcome.
Sunday, August 10, 2014
Monday, August 10, 1914. Austro Hungaria takes the field against Imperial Russia.
Austro Hungaria invaded Russia.
The Germans retook Mulhouse.
The Ottoman Empire opened the Dardanelles to allow German cruisers SMS Goeben and SMS Breslau passage to Constantinople.
The United Kingdom released all suffragette prisoners.
Saturday, August 9, 2014
Sunday, August 9, 1914. The end of the second phase of the Mexican Revolution.
The leaders of the Constitutionalist met with interim Mexican president Francisco S. Carvajal and the unconditional surrender of the Federals in exchange for safe passage of all federal troops and senior government leaders out of Mexico City. The defeated Federals left the following day.
Montenegro declared war on Austro Hungaria.
The French dirigible overflew portions of Germany.
British ships received definitive actual wartime orders to pursue the German warships SMS Goeben and Breslau.
The Catholic Archbishop of Brisbane James Duhig dedicated the opening of St Brigid's Church in Brisbane.
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Saturday, August 8, 1914. Leaving for the Antarctic.
Friday, August 8, 2014
WHEELS THAT WON THE WEST®: Wyoming Sheep Wagons
Front tire chains?
I can understand why the back tires were chained, by why the front? For better steering? It could not have been a four wheel drive.
Old Picture of the Day: Cowboy Week
Saturday, August 8, 1914. Leaving for the Antarctic.
The UK passed the first Defence of the Realm Act authorizing wartime censorship.
French forces took Muhouse in Alsace, although they'd be pushed back out two days later.
German colonial authorities executed Cameroonian resistance leaders Martin-Paul Samba and Rudolf Duala Manga Bell for treason.
The Shackleton Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition left the UK for Antarctica, seemingly out of context and now out of their own times.
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