FREE WHITEWATER

Monthly Archives: September 2007

Labor Day 2007

Labor Day became a national holiday in 1894. Lincoln, right about so many things, was right about labor:

Labor is prior to, and independent of, capital. Capital is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if Labor had not first existed. Labor is superior to capital, and deserves much the higher consideration.

The poster that I have reproduced on FREE WHITEWATER today is part of the beautiful, haunting collection of Second World War posters available online at Northwestern University.

This poster from 1943 depicts labor at its best: private citizens of different races working together productively to defeat the enemies of free private laborers and all decent people. Hard, private efforts in support of a great, noble public cause: these are the laborers to whom I, and all others in this city, will be forever indebted.

Beautiful Whitewater: The Crosswalk by Mulberry Glen

There’s a new walkway crossing Main Street, connecting Maple Mulberry Glen with Sentry’s parking lot. It’s a good idea, and a small but useful civic improvement. We were right to place a similar walkway near the university. (UPDATE, 6:02 p.m. — I have no idea why I originally wrote Maple Glen for Mulberry Glen. Our town’s complex is called Mulberry; Maple Glen — wherever it may be — is a matter for others to consider.)

Motorists who wish to race past Whitewater may do so, via the bypass. Those driving along Main Street are more likely to have a local destination, and consequently be driving more slowly. Nonetheless, the street near Wal-Mart is stark, and looks fundamentally commercial; it’s an invitation to drive more quickly. The crosswalk is a useful, visible reminder that this stretch along Main includes several apartments, and that motorists should exercise caution as tenants might be crossing the street.

(The crosswalk accomplishes far more than stationing a patrol car near the Hawk Motel to catch speeders. The patrol car only serves to deter those it pulls over, and those who observe the subsequent ticketing. By the nature of the task, the officer and car are partially obscured for the assignment, and will eventually leave away when the task ends, or when boredom and banality take their toll.)

The crosswalk is an ever-present reminder that pedestrian-tenant are in the area, and also guides them on a path to take across Main Street.