Archive for July, 2009

How Essential Is Internet Access?

Wednesday, July 8th, 2009

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I walked downstairs this morning from the office and noticed something odd. Every single person in the house was on the internet in one way or another. I was doing my normal thing in the office (news, email, banking). Gabi was on Skype, talking on her iPhone to Hungary (iPhone Skype can only use a wireless internet connection). The three kids were all watching Dora the Explorer, streamed from Netflix through my Xbox 360.

What did we do in the 1960′s without all of this?

First Contact

Tuesday, July 7th, 2009

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While I was in Wisconsin, I was rereading Jared Diamond’s The Third Chimpanzee for the third time. A great book, and clearly a forerunner to Guns, Germs and Steel.

The book deals a bit more with Diamond’s work and personal experience in New Guinea. The most fascinating aspect is that the central highlands where the last major population center of Stone Age people living into modern times with no knowledge of the outside world were discovered. Estimates range from 250,000 to one million people living there.

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There were two regions of people – one in the east that was discovered in 1930, and a western group that was discovered in 1938. The First Contact with the Eastern group in 1930 is fully documented and readily available on the web in a fifty minute video here. Quoting from the Third Chimpanzee:

First-contact patrols had a traumatic effect that is difficult for those of us living in the modern world to imagine. Highlanders “discovered” by Michael Leahy in the 1930′s, and interviewed fifty years later, still recalled perfectly where they where and what they were doing at the moment of first contact. Perhaps the closest parallel, to modern Americans and Europeans, is our recollection of one or two of the most important political events in our lives. Most Americans my age recall that moment on December 7, 1941, when they heard of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. We knew at once that our lives would be very different for years to come, as a result of the news. Yet even the impact of Pearl Harbor and of the resulting war on American society was minor, compared to the impact of a first contact patrol on New Guinea highlanders. On that day, their world changed forever.

A book by Bob Connolly and Robin Anderson entitled First Contact poignantly relates that moment in the eastern highlands, as recalled in their old age by New Guineans and whites who met there as young adults and children in the 1930s. Terrified highlanders took the whites for returning ghosts, until the New Guineans dug up and scrutinized the whites’ buried feces, sent terrified young girls to have sex with the intruders and discovered that whites defecated and were men like themselves. Leahy wrote in his diaries that highlanders smelled bad, while at the same time the highlanders were finding the whites’ smell strange and frightening. Leahy’s obsession with gold was as bizarre to the highlanders as their obsession with their own form of wealth and currency—cowry shells—was to him.

This is a truly amazing document. I sat fascinated for the full 50 minutes. Again, the link is here.

Freitag Reunion

Monday, July 6th, 2009

The Freitag Family Reunion was a smashing success. Everyone had a great time. I only wish we could have stayed longer. There were about 40 descendants of Nicholas Freitag (1872-1952) and Elsbeth Hefty (1873-1941) gathered together in New Glarus last week. I only have a few photos, but hope to find a few more posted by other people soon.

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Nicholas Freitag’s Farm House from 1906, with Daniel Solon Steussy running across the porch.

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Tomato Mountain

Monday, July 6th, 2009

IMG_1768Alex Steussy-Williams has taken a job for the summer, working on an organic farm near New Glarus. It would be hard to imagine somewhere further from Occidental College in urban Los Angeles, where she will be a junior next year. We went to see her there on Friday.

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Robin Steussy (Oct. 8, 1921 – Feb. 18, 2009)

Monday, July 6th, 2009

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(This was originally published in February, soon after Robin died. It was extensively updated July 6, 2009, following a memorial ceremony in Wisconsin. Click below for the full text and photos.)

Robin E. Steussy passed away on Wednesday. He was my uncle; my father’s older brother. Despite similarities in our stories (extensive foreign travel, languages, married to Hungarian spouses), I know very little about him. I do know that he served in World War II and, after the war, in the foreign service in Budapest and Iran. He was in declining health as long ago as 2001 when he was unable to make it to my wedding.

The photos above from the early 1940′s are the only ones I have. Both are outtakes from family photos (originals are here and here). The woman with him is his mother, Helen Freitag Steussy.

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Off to Wisconsin!

Thursday, July 2nd, 2009

We’re off right now! Will be updating on Twitter, located here.

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Temecula Apple Store Part Two

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

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News is that Apple applied for a retail permit in Temecula in June, and that the store will be in the Promenade as reported here before.

Here is the new news release.

Here is my original post from the Spring.

July First

Wednesday, July 1st, 2009

Half of the year is gone already? What happened??