c"5.R.A. - Colorado Court Reporters Association
Transcription
c"5.R.A. - Colorado Court Reporters Association
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ VOLI,'ME III December-January NT'MBER 5 I I975 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ c"5.R.A. \---.. lg"haadn,9/t" atl,wd -&d"cth,h.am Wahu COLORADCI SHORIHAND REPORTERS ASSOCTATION OFTICERS AND COMMITTEHS, )-974-75 Eleited Officers President Earl E. Meek, Colorado Springs President-E1ect Marjorie A. Whit.e, LaJunta Vice*President Gary R. Blando, Longmont Secretary Ruth Dresie, Lamar Treasurer Fred H. Blackett, Executive Committee ffiA1amosa Viola J" Lundberg Auleen H. tau eSR Board *Tr-eFftl€nt Denver Denver Gilbert I. Davenport Forrest W. Calkins charline scoggin Thos. H" cavanagh, sr. Membershi Marjorie e. White Ruth Dresie Lee Harms John Spera Yvonne Diekman Secretary Member CSR Board Chairman Dar].ene Armbeck, Denver James Kalanar AJ-amosa Area Representatives F.t Grand Junction Boulder Lamar spera Denv€r Diekman Durango Marjorie A. whlte LaJunLa EarL fi. Meek col"o. springs Yvonne islative otto ulrlch Auleen H. Lau Fred V{. Trachte Charline, Scoggin 'Thomas Rooklidge Forrest W. Calkins Reporting Technigues Editorial Gary R. Blando Nan Fbrnst Auleen tI. tau Kathleen L. Doy3-e James Kalana Debra K. Perdue Betsy Wal-lace Reporters Hbndbook Consti-tution & Bv-Laws Viola J. Lundberg Thos. H. Cavanagh, Jr. Carol Kerr Earl E. Meek Leo & Laura Koenig Placement Vesta Wine Necrology & Historian John A. Pritchard Banquet Qe4g{gl-84pqr!rqs Dee Helfrich Ken Avery Viola J. Lundberg Resolutions -ffiFffiilEtess Beverlee Hedrick Dan F. l,tahady Pat Galloway Law School- Speaker Bert Naster Bill Jenki-ns Scholarshi Ethics e Grievance ffind Col"orado Springs Nominatin enrietta t. Denni.s Brenner SLaven Darlene Armbeck Dorothy Fankhauser Lee Harills State tiaison ffihte 4q4lllps Lance C. BJella 8i11 Price Karen Longworth Museum --fffi'spera John E. Barnes VT&ER *%fi-Every Perry Goldstein Fred W. Trachte George fencich Darlene Armbeck (1 Yr. ) (2 Thos. H. Cavanagh, Sr, Yrs . ) (3 Yrs. ) Gary R. Blando 3 December-January, rgf PRESIDENTIS MESSAGE By the time you receive this issue of the RAMblings there will be approximatefy two months left before our annual convention. I personally fllf it is important for every member of this Association, whether official or freelance, to attend every convention possible, but especiallyme so this year. So that this last statement doesn't sound holl-ow, Iet expound on the reasons for just a moment. First of all, this year we celebrate the 50th Anniversary of the Colorado CSR, and that is to be the theme of the banquet on Saturday thern night. This year, as before, we will honor our judges by inviting judge each to be sent wiII to be our gueits. Before l-ong an invitation informing ftim of our banquet, but it is up to you individuall-y to invite your judqe as your guest. And if you have always wanted to, but just never got aroun-d.- to it, what better year to do so? Secondly, there are a number of matters of utmost interest and importance to be discussed at the meeting. You wil-l find contained in the next issue of the ReMbi-ings the suggested revlsion of our CSRA Constitution and Byl-aws. I urge your suggestions and crJ-ticisms. This effort is being made in order that we might not be out of conformity with the new NSRA Constitution and Bylaws. There will be di-scussion on the feasibility of a CSRA Executive Secretary. A committee is working on this now gathering informatLon from around the country. However, your input and ideas will- be needed. Last October it was voted that future mid-Winter meetings would be muJ-ti-day affairs, not just one day business sessions, and would lncl-ude seminars and workshops of various types. We need your suggestions as to what you would like to see along this 1ine. (Through the fine efforts of Uarjorie Allen White we have received permission from the through Harry Lawson, for officials to attend these Chief Justice, ,'during a day when the;udicill Conference, as long as it is on seminars judge to a assigned any reporter the court is noL in session hearing emergency matters should femain at the court.") And last but not leasti we have an outstanding speaker lined up for the banquet. Dr. John Sterrgtt is the former Scientific Advisor to the North American Air Defense C6hunand; he is a very entertaining and educational speaker, and his speaking engagements carry him around the wor1d. In conclusion, let tne urge you to make your reservations now. Attend the meeting -- get involved; escort your Judge and his or her spouse to the banquet -- get to know them better and J-et them get to fnow you better, ind your rel-ationshlp wil-l be richer f or the experience. See you there. Gene WHIP INFLATION NOW: In Arkansas it means Wilbur Is Naughty. A tt{iami button manuf acturer couldn't unload his WIN buttons. He changed the wording to "Stop Inflation Now" SIN - and j-s doing well. *** Medical doctors and chiropractors are arguing about acupuncture but, a profession, neither has the delicate touch with a needl-e shown by as lawyers *** WELCOME TO THE WOOLSACK Governor Vanderhoof selected Hon. Richard Dana, Boulder County Court, to succeed Hon. Howard O. Ashton, District Judge, who retired January I, L975. Judge Dana is a CU graduate, has served as a Deputy District Attorney in Arapahoe and B5ulder Counties, and is one irf ifre youngest judges appointed to the Boulder County Court. Judge Dana has appointed Sharon Levi, CSRr ds his reporter in District Court. *** Steve Dugger, a recent student at Mile-Hi, was killed in an automobile accident December 19 near Oklahoma City. Steve reported briefly in Colorado Springs for his uncJ-e, Kenneth Kirkpatrick and, at the time of his death, was ieporting for another uncle, Howard E. Kirkpatrick, in Oklahoma City. CSRA extends its sympathy to Steve's famlly. .t * * oo'* CSRA President Earl E. Meek has been named a member of the Nominating Committee. NSRA *** John Spera reports he now has exhibits honoring Evel-yn Brenner and Leonard and Lois Russo in the CSRA Muserrn in the Clty-County Building in Denver. *** er-Januar IN DENVER The National Shorthand Reporters Association's tests for Certificates of profj-ciency and Merit will be conducted April 5 | L975, dt Mile Hi Reporting Schooll 6301 West 44th Avenue, Wheat Ridge, Colorado. Warmup dictaa'm' ti5n will begin at 9:00 a.m., with the tests to start at l-0:00applicant each however, furnished; be paper will Typewriters ind typing should bring a typing eraser and a dictionary. For those interested in serious practice before the testsr dh attempt will be made to provide dictation practice in the evenings during the week prior to the tests. For information about practice schedules, 794-928L; home 798-2240) ' contact JOHN BOVERIE, CSR, Littleton (office Under the new NSRA Bylawsr any NSRA member who has attained the CP or CM by June 30, 1"975, is eligible for listing in the new.NSRA Registry of Rlgistered Professional Reporters. You are also reminded that following tfrit date these tests will- be so1eLy conducted by the new NSRA Academy of Professional Reporters. CSRA encourages atl of its members to try their hand at these tests - The Cp and CM are nationally-recognized standards of reporting competency and are respected by the bench, bar, and reporters al-ike. A $10 test fee, payable to NSRA, is charged all applicants taking the tests. NSRA memLeiship is now a requisite, but membership appl-ication blanks will be avaj-lable for non-members wishing to participate. ****rr************** NSRA CP-C}I TESTS TO BE CONDUCTED MODEL DEMONSTRATES BRA IN COURT SUIT of the (Ap) "It,s the construction of the combination sat Conner Conner. C. William Judge told whole that counts," a lawyer the of judge characteristics the to in the witness box, the better NEW YORK modelrs 348 brassiere. clini-cal, in Federal courtroom, where lawyers It was all very -design, q"u'blity control, straps, points, creeping, spoke of function of manufacturerst tolerances and "tti'e crossing point"" What made the scene unusual was brunette model Paula Mann, strj-pped to the waist except for a "cross your heart" bra, standing against the wood-panell-ed wall while tlt" lawyers argued across her torso. Miss Mann, also weari-ng black stretch pants, _and a black cloche hat with gold sequins, stood poker-faced as the trained fltting modelshe isr nitif a recess was dellared and she retrieved her blouse. Then she smiled. Court stenographer Morris Kligman suffered some frustration, having 6 RAMblinqs December-JanuarY, L975 to turn his back to write shorthand on a table. Judge Conner reserved decision on a motion by Splendor Form Bra, Inc. and Forever Yours, Inc. to declare a Rapid American Corp. patent on the Playtex bra invalid or to find that the patent was not infringed. ?t TO: HARRY LAWSON, STATE *** ** ** *** ***** ***** JUDICIAL ADMINISTRATOR FROM: JAMES P. FORD, SECRETARY, STATE BOARD OF SHORTHAND REPORTERS SUBJECT: THOSE PASSING CERTIFIED SHORTHAND REPORTER EXAMINATION GIVEN NOVEMBER 30, L974 FOLLOWING IS A LIST OF THOSE PERSONS WHO PASSED THE CSR EXAMINATTON crvEN 1l_-3 0-7 4. NANCY ELLEN FAUST | 6640 E. Arizona #152, Denver, Col-orado 80222 BARBARA DAHL BAILEY, 4200 Yarrow #2, Wheatridge, CoJ-orado 80033 MARY JEAN MERKLING, Route 2, Clearwater, Minnesota 55320 @703BrassieDrive,GrandJunction,Co1.orado81501NADIA STELLARS, 1914 Mt. Zj-on Drive, Go1den, Colorado 8040L DEBRA POWELL, 3060 E. Bridge Street, #255, Brighton, Colorado DEBRA KAY GOODWIN, 2216 7th Avenue, 8-210, Pueblo, Colorado 81-003 JANET McCLEARY, 690 Birch, Denver, Col-orado MONICA MARTIN, 4530 N. 23rd Avenue, Phoenj-x, Arizona CHERYL ANN AUTOTTE, 2808 Davie Boulevard, Ft. Lauderdal-e, Florida 33312 SHARON ZEPPELIN, 1675 S. Birch, Denver, Colorado CONGRATULATIONS: ********************* CALENDAR: February L2, 1975 Lincoln's Birthday and Ash Wednesday February L7, Ig75 whdhington's Birthday March 17, 1975 St. "*'Patrick's March 22, l-975 CSR GOLDEN ANNIVERSARY Meeting, Day BROWN Celebration and Annual PALACE, Denver March 30, Lg75 Easter April 5, l-975 August I I97 5 Tests, Mile Hi, 9:00 a.m. NSRA Convention, Kansas City, Missouri, at CP-CM fabul-ous Crown Center inqs 7 December-January, Ronald ldeaver, husband of Lorraine Fankhouser Weaver, was killed in an employment accident in early November. He had previously attended Baptist Bible College j-n Denver and Lorraine is Judge Lawrltson's reporter in Denver Juvenile Court. CSRA extends its sympathy to the famil-ies. ***** NSRA President Kosky has accepted our invitation and will be in attendance at our annual meetinq March 22. ***** MiIe Hi was lucky to have four visitors last month. Viol-a Lundberg directed a deposition workshop, Robble Griggs conducted the speed cl-asses for two weeks prior to the CSR test; Ann Makowsky from troison Laboratories, who spoke at the midyear CSRA meeting, and Doug Monsoor, They genLakewood Pol-ice Laboratory, whose speciaLty is fingerprints. erated a lot of interest among the students. Jack Regensberger has left the teaching staff to join Bil-l Jenkens' firm. Charles Jarstfer has been appoi-nted head of our reporting department and Debbie Leavitt (CSR) will be back from a maternity leave to take over some of the advanced classes. Terri Malkin and Nancy Newton, two recent graduates of Mile Hi' completed the course j-n a record thirteen months. Barbara Bailey (a job-out) received her CSR twelve months from the time she entered Mile Hi. Kitty Lovejoy joined others from Mile Hi working as a freeLance reporter in Phoenix, Arizona. December 20 will see Denise Nelson, Theresa Coffman, Jane OfBrien and Kitty Lovejoy receiving their graudaIf anyone has a job available, l-et us know. tion certificates. Of the 43 new students who enrolled for the fall quarter we have lost one student and gained one student. We had eight mal-es (18%) jo+n us in September and the student body is made up of 24 males (19%) and 101 females. We have two brothers and one sister from one famil-y enrolled and one set of triplets. We were sorry to see the cbnceftation of National's Video Tape Workshop, p3-anned for Denver. We have been working with the Colorado VT committee and Gene Satler to reschedule the workshop for mid-spring, We hope to have a positive date within a few weeks. Mil-e Hi will start the holiday on December 21, and wil.L open the doors on January 6,1-975, with new classes. At the present time we have twenty-one new students enrolled for the winter quarter. Charles Tatman 8 RAMblings December-Januaryr 1975 the EI Paso County Legal Secretaries "Certiorari": If a lawyer had written the first line of the Lord's Prayer, "Gj-ve us this day our daily breadr" it might have read l-ike t.his: "We respectfully petition, request and entreat that due and adequate provision be made, this day and date first above inscribed, for the satisfying of Petitioners' nut.ritional requirements and for the organizing of such methods of allocat,ion and distributlon as may be deemed necessary and proper to assure the reception by and for said Petitioners of such quantity of cereal products (hereinafter ca1led 'breadr) as shall, in the judgment of the aforesaj-d Petitioners, constitute a sufficient ... " ,*** From SEE YOUR JANUARY, 1974, NSR, page 6: Carol Ann White, CSR, formerly with Richard & Casey B. Smith, Chattanoogd, Tennessee, came to Denver in July to join the Naster & Tomko fi-rm. WELCOME meeting. to Colorado. We hope to meet you at the March 22nd *** A dilemma is snow when you're trying go to Florida. tires or to decide whether to buy a new set of ********************* Hoping to generate a little business for Jack Dennis, CSRA historian, we have permission to print the followj-ng: LIFE HISTORY OF E. WENDELL MORTON 323L Ammona Court Wheat Ridge, Co3-orado 80033 February 22, L974 Born March 16n 1910, New Concord, Ohio. Gregg System. I graduated from the University of Denver in the year 1932, which was at the bottom of the great depression. At that time those with engineeri-ng degrees couldn't get jobs. I had no particul-ar skills except high school- shorthand and typing, which did l-ead to a coupl-e of uninteresting jobs. Then I spent seven years in an excitlng business as a steel salesman with CF&I Steel Corporation in Denver, Portland' Oregon, and EI Paso, Texas. The vice president who hired me was involved ngs 9 December-JanuarY' in a running feud with others in the company. After he died in 1940 I quit before somebody fired me. Then there was a happy discovery: somebody tol-d me that shorthand reporters made $101000 a year (the job I had l-eft paid $11800 a year). Also I was tol-d there was a scarcity of reporters and al-ways had been, that reporters were rarely ever fired, that a freelance reporter need never be fired by all his customers at once. I says, "Thatrs for me," and that's how come in reporting. After four years acquiring shorthand skill, ftY first job was with the Industrial Commission of Colorado for four more years. The next six years, from 1948 to L954, I was Official Reporter for Judge Harold H. Davies of the First Judicial DistricL. The district covered the countj-es of Jefferson, Clear Creek, Gilpin, Adams and Arapahoe. My PaI, Jack Dennis, was Official Reporter for Judge Osmer E. Smith, the one other judge in the d.istrict. Today in L974 there are fourteen district judges and fourteen reporters serving the same territory. From Lg54 to ]-964 I freelanced. That was exciting and satisfying, but the work load was hard to control. When I got a cal-I to take a deposition, I never did learn how to S&Y, "No. " A1so, after a threehour deposition on a Friday, the lawyers would saYr "Oh, we forgot to tetl you this case goes to trial next Tuesday." There goes another weekend. On December 1st, I964t I closed my freelance office and went to work for Judge George G. Priest at Golden, Colorado. In Junet I972t I retired. llavenft written a fine of verbatim shorthand since. I am enjoying working at varj-ous projects at ry, own speed for a change, not the pace set for me by someone else's mouth. My wife, Esther' was the most expensive transcriber in town. I had to pay her all- the money I took in. We have a son, Edward, who is an executive with Safeway Storest Inc., and a. daughter, Judy, who is a conmercial artist and advertising director with King Soopers. Three grandchil-dren. Colorado Certificate No. 77. Hobby photography. EI Paso County Legal Secr6taries "Certiorari": WILL ROGERS -. THE LEGAL PROFESSION'S BEST CRITIC Will smiled as he said, "The minute you read something and you can't understand it, you can be sure it was written by a lawyer' Thent if you gJ-ve it to another lawyer to read and he dont know jrrlt what it means, Lhen you can be sure it was drawn up by a lawyer. If its in a few words and is plain, and understandabJe only one way, it was written by a non-Iawyer. "Everytime a lawyer writes something, he is not writi-ng for From r-Januar posteritlz. He is writing so endless others of his craft can make a living out of trying to figure out what he said. Course perhaps he hadnt really said anything, thats what makes it hard to explain. "Anyhow, they are like a lot more of the crafts that many of us live by, great but really useless. One leveJ headed smart man could interpret every law there is. If you commit a crirne, either you did or you dident, without Habeus Corpus, change of venue r or any other 1ega1 shindig. . . . "There is two types of larceny, petty and grand, and the courts will rea11y give you a longer sentence for petty than they do for grand. They are suppose to be treated equal in the eyes of the 1aw, but the judges always put a littl-e extra on for petty, as a kind of a fine for stupidness. If thats all you 9ot, you ought to go to jail l-onger. r..r' Commenting on defense attorneys, Idil-l smiled as he drawled, "They should recommend a law' that every case that went on trial, the lawyer defending shoul-d be tried first, then if he came clear, he was eligible to defend. As it is now they are trying the wrong man." One of Wilt's favorite pastimes was attending the American Bar Association annual meetings. He wrote from a meeting in Los Angeles j-n 1935, "...We11, the lawyers are leaving us. They had a good time, Like all- conventions, dident do anything. No convention ever did anything. If thls country ever becomes civil-ized, the first thing eliminated would be people trapsing around to get a convention, and the humorous thing about them is they always want and hol-d em in the hottest weather. Convention sl-ogans shoul-d be 'lets meet and perspire together.r Anyhow, they was a good bunch and they had a good convention and it was good to mmet t m. tt - American Bar Association Journal (Sa. Note: The author of the above article was SANDY F. KRAEMER, Attorney at Law, ASHER, KRAEMER & KENDALL, 430 North Tejon, Colorado Springs, Colorado. ) *** Snatched: Definition of a consuftint: A man who borrows your watch to answer your question of what tinie it i-s. ,r** p. Ford has resigned as CSR board SecreLary and Pl-acement Officer for CSRA. Governor Lamm will- appoint a new CSR board Secretary shortly, *** James Yvonne Diekman, CSR, has accepted the position as Sedgwick County District Court, Wichita. *** roving reporter in the l]. RAMblings December-January, I975 Enlightening information from the Dirty Thirties: DEPRESSION JOKE Anybody Can Make a Mistake Whenever our brilliant correspondent from Cabot, Ark., finds herself completely out of patience she wrltes us about it, says the Kansas City, Mo., Times. This time her penetrating mind enlightens us with: "When the government appointed a man who never saw a silo to supervise our community garden, I never said a word. When he had the men cut out willows and stake the forty acres of bush peas -- which require no staking I maintained silence. When the entj-re project consumed $21800 and the plot produced but two and one half bushels of shelled peas last year when there was no drought, I kept my own counsel. But now with the government killing little piglets and shooting bony bulIs, I feel that capable persons should be in charge of the s1-ar.rghter. The guy they sent here didnrt know a steer from a gelding. When the embittered farmers led their stock in for the sacrifice before this modern Abraham, they sensed at once how uninformed he was and sent him seeking aid from his indexed reference book from the start. "When an old bil1y goat was paraded by for his approval he failed to find such an animal among his diagrams and bl-ue printsr so he followed the usual custom and gave Washington a ring. The home offj-ce wasted two hours locating a man on the force who had ever seen a farm. "The Arkansas representative of the livestock destruction committee then desperately described the animal as having hairy, 3-ooped ears, a 1ong, sad face, a meek €ye, a strong odor and l-engthy chin But he got no farther. The office boy interrupted with: whiskers. rDonrt shoot him: thatrs one of the farmers. "' ***** Marge Goodenough and Beverly Howard are now reporting for the Industrial- Commission. Marge I s successor in County Court, Littleton, is Rosemary De Martini. Jan Cinocco is reporting "fn Arapahoe County Court at 15400 East t4th Place, Aurora. Debbie Perdue, Colorado Springs, is in South America for two months holiday Maureen for Debbie. Schultz, Madi.son, Wisconsinr freelancer, is substituting ***** T2 W --bce@ of an opj-nion: District Court, Essex County, New Jersey Decided April 13, 1970 109 N.J. Super 594 Roberts, Wash & Co. vs. Trugman "Action by court reporter against husband, wife, and wife's attorney for cost of depositions in a divorce action. Attorney crossclaimed against both husband and wife. The Essex County Dj-strict Court, Yanoff, J.D.C., held that where client, if known to court reporter prior to taking of depositions, was at most only a name, and reporter came at attorneyrs request, not clientrs, and there was uncontradicted evidence that it was practice and custom in court reporter-attorney deal-ings that the attorney, not the client, be responsible for payment for depositions' court reporter was entitled to judgment against attorney for cost of SYNOPSIS depositions. " *** Another cutie from E1 Paso County Legal Secretaries "Certiorari": My son's not dumb and wanted to know how come there was more than one Santa" So I had to tel-l him the truth about subordinate Clauses. *** REMINISCENCES T *, The Judge had just sente4rced the crimlnal to umpteen years in the State Penitentiary and the poor Eellow was standing there mumbJ-ing to himself. Sure that he was bei-ng threatened, the Judge insisted on a repeat of the mumblings, and the future convict said, "Judge, I just said that you were being mighty free with my time." *** This year I overheard what one youngster told the department store Santa. "My folks are getting all the toysr you just bring the batteries!" *** 1ate. Please keep us up to date on your addresses. HAPPY NEW YEAR a little Nan J. Ernst 13 naMblingF oecember.-.Jaluary ' 1975 POTPOURET From California "Caligrams" : Solomon Halpern, CSR, formerly of Denver, has been elected Treasurer of the San Francisco Official Court Reporters Association. *** NEW ''CRAFTS PAY'' RATES From the San Francisco Chronicle Board of Supervisors, under the present system of setting City Hal1 wages the "crafts pay" law -- wil-I have to pay these minimum wage rates next April for the f iscal year beginning on Ju1-y l-. LABORER - $171059 a year ($328 a week), going up to $19,075 ($367) the following June. GARDENER - A pay range of about $15,300 to $1-8,650 ($295 to $300 a week), depending on Lime in grade. The supervisors also wilL be Iegally obligated to set a range of about $171100 to $20r832 t$330 to $400) beginning in Ju1-y , 1976. STREET CLEANER - The shovel men on street cleaning crews get a laborer's pay. Under a court ruling, which is being appealed, sweepers will get the same. Tf sweepers lose the suit, their pay range will- be roughly $12r000 to $15,300 next year ($240 to $295 a week), and $1-4,100 to $17,100 ($270 to $330) beginning in Ju1-y, L976. LIGHT TRUCK DRIVER - $20,800 a year ($400 a week), going up to $22,730 ($437) the following June. This rate is for drivers of pickups and sma11 dump trucks. HEAVY TRUCK DRTVER - $22,IOO a year ($425)' rising to $25t25A ($485) the following June SURVEYOR'S ROD HOLDER - $20,700 a year ($395 a week), going up to $22,500 ($435 a week) the foll-swing June. pAINTER - $19,900 a year "'t$:eO a week), rising to $20r600 on January L, L976. Under the current crafts pay law, tentative wage rates will- have to be set for carpenters, 'pl-umbers and electrj-cians next ApriL. These interim rates will be increased in July by whatever raises unions negotiate with private industry contractors next spring. SAN FRANCTSCO: The ,r** Ponder this: "An empty bag cannot stand upright." *** B. Franklin. 14 ngs December-January' The Caligrams edj-tors says: "I'11 print all the news thatrs fit to print. wfro, what, when, where, how and wElT No 'why' on wedding stories. " *** California's annual dues are now $60 per year. *** other operations? o Have you had any A Oh, just when I had my autopsy. *** Most good lawyers live well, work hard, and die poor. Danie] Webster , IB47 . ***** From Ohio's Buckeye Record: Martin Fincun, Fincun Court Reporters, Cleveland, passed away October 26, L974. Marty had been nominated as a Fellow to the Academy of Professional Reporters and had garnered innumerable honors during his long career. Having co-authored the Phil-adelphia Cl-inic Course and taught many seminars, Marty was well known ln the reporting field, ***** Outline. Excerpts from the President's address to the Pennsylvania Stenographic Association in 1883: linguist, able to report ". .. You must first be an accomplished(however mispronounced) not, only the classic Latin of the 1aw hereafter to be or and Greek, but testimony in any tongue spoken you go a1-on9. spoken in America, translating as ,,. . . Next you must have a*.thorough acquaintance with the technical terms of tle physician, b-'6tanistl ettgineer, tradesman' artisan be quick to follow the scientific expert in any subject. understand legat terms as well as the best "... Of course you must(the law being your specialty), and catch of those who use them them, half expressed or less, without hesitation or doubt. draughts"... you must be a mathematician, practical surveyor,inand cases land evidence man, so as to make your own drafts from the From The 15 RAMblings Pecember-Jaluary,. 19 /5 the parties neglect to leave any papers with the court. "... Physically, you must be able to 'sit' as long as 'the court' can, say eleven hours a day in country districts, includj-ng about four hours by lamplight; to work al-l night at transcription by pen or typewriter, and Lo be fresh for notetaking at half-past eight in the morning. ".. . Morally, you are to keep yourself clean in an atmosphere of tobacco smoke, criminals, and politicj-ans mixed with officeholders' saturated with the strong sme1l of whiskey and peculation." Ed. note: How different is your situation in L975? ***** when From "Arizonotes": From the Illinois Court Reporters Association bul-letin: KNOCK, KNOCK A reporter knocked at the Pearly Gate, His face was scarred and old; He stood before the Man of Fate, Asking admission to the fold. "What have you done," Saint Peter asked, "to gain admission here?" "Itve been a reporter, Sirr" he said "for many and many a year. " The Pearly G"lu, swung open wide, Saint Peter touched the bell; "Come inr" he said, "and choose your harp. Yourve had your share of hell." - Wm. G. Haxby *** Kitty Lovejoy from Mile-Hi has joined a freel-ance firm in Fhoenix. *** l-6 ngs December-January, Sandra McFate, new NSRA director, is opening "McFate Reporting Services" at 2333 North Third Street, Phoenix, as of January ***** 1. From Oklahoma: Excerpt from the Presidentrs Message: to leave with each of you, especially the younger reporter. As you do down through life, 'having in the palm of your handr' the testimony which involves the life or property of some litigant or defendant and you are in the process of prepari-ng your transcript of said case, ask yourself : 'Am I getting out the kind of record I would want a reporter to get out in rny case, if the position were reversed?o If the answer is oor diligently and laboriously work harder at your profession. Strive to be the best court reporter there is. Treat your fellow reporters and members of the bar with the proper respect and with kindness as you continue your profession. " *** "One thought A South Carol-ina state law forbids people to crawl around in the public sewers without a written permi-t from the "proper authorities. " .- " **tr not wear a goatee in the State of Massachusetts unless he pays fee or tax. A man may a *** result of Oklahoma's seminar in December is that they now have a total of l-3 CP holders and 6 CM writers. ***** One GET YOUR APPLICATIONS IN NOW FOR 1975. DUES ARE $2O.OO PAYABLE JANUARY L, T975. COLORADO SHORTHAND REPORTERS ASSOCIATION Ruth Dresie, Secretary Courthouse Lamar, CoJ-orado 8L052 APPLICATION FOR MEMBERSH]P .. ' ' I hereby apply for membership in the Col-orado Shorthand Reporters o""ociation. Name Address ZIP Phone (Office) (Residence) Education and training: Experience: Signatures Two endorsing NSRA-CSRA members: 1. ') (Circle) CSR What state? I am presently employed by: CP (Annual dues $20.00) is enclosed. ( ) for $ I am a CSR official reporter employed by the State of eligible to have my dues paid by the state. ( ) My check CoJ-orado and Signature Approved by the Executive Board: Date CM