National Taco Day: Let's Taco 'Bout Tacos

How your Harris County Law librarians spend their weekends.

How your Harris County Law librarians spend their weekends.

This Sunday, October 4, Americans will set aside their differences and join together in honor of the humble but mighty taco. We owe this annual celebration to a Texan, Roberto L. Gomez.

Gomez, a San Antonian, was a force in the 1960 “Viva Kennedy!” JFK campaign movement in the southwest. Once Kennedy was in office, Gomez used his connection to the President’s brand to promote various Mexican foods familiar to the San Antonio community, starting in 1961 when he sent President Kennedy a 48 pound tamale, guarded by a motorcade, as a birthday gift. Gomez continued to build on this idea, and in 1965 he sent President Johnson, a dedicated Texan, a 55 pound taco. Shortly thereafter, Gomez helped found the National Taco Council. In 1968, San Antonio’s Congressman Rep. Henry B. Gonzalez stood on the floor of Congress and called for the first National Taco Day to occur that year on May 3. After some hopping around, in 2004 National Taco Day landed on October 4.

Some have speculated that the taco, in its perfect simplicty, must have come to us from deep in the past. In reality, it’s a modern miracle; an early example of fast food, born of industrialization and the need for a quick lunch break.

The taco’s origins are in 18th century Mexico, where silver miners toiled in caves. To extract silver, they would wrap a bit of gun powder in a piece of paper, then slide that into a crack in the rock face. They referred to the gun powder and paper wrap as a “taco.”

Then at some point in the 19th century, a genius Mexican mind, now anonymous due to the fog of history, decided to mimic this by wrapping meat inside a tortilla, and called their culinary innovation a “miner’s taco.”

Fast forward to San Antonio in 1905, where historians have found the first recorded mention of this food taco in the United States. The taco, a true and authentic Mexican food, likely came to San Antonio with Mexican migrants coming for work. It was one of the exotic examples of Mexican cuisine served by so-called “Chili Queens,” whose pushcarts provided Americans with an opportunity to sample culinary life south of the border.

If you travel to Mexico, don’t expect to find a hardshell taco. The crunchy, u-shaped taco shell was an innovation of United States entrepreneur Glen Bell in the 1950s, as he came up with the idea to sell gringo-friendly “Mexican food” to the masses through a franchise business he called Taco Bell.

Another American franchise operation, Subway, made international news yesterday when an Irish court ruled its baked loaves are too confectionery to legally be called “bread.” Is there a similar legal defintion in the United States of a taco?

The answer is that while lawmakers here have yet to define what a taco is, a Worcester County Superior Court in Massachusetts ruled in 2006 that a taco is NOT a sandwich. Thus the taco continues to reign supreme in its own right.

Further Exploration:

Celebrating the 105th Anniversary of the Harris County Law Library

This day, October 1, 2020, marks the 105th Anniversary of the founding of the Harris County Law Library. Every day, we are committed to promoting open and equal access to justice for all, including self-represented litigants and the local legal community.

Since the celebration of our Centennial in 2015, the Law Library has continued to grow and evolve. We are especially proud of our ability to adapt our services during this unprecedented public health crisis and to continue responding to the legal needs of Harris County residents. We aim to serve individuals whose legal concerns are just as pressing as ever, despite interruptions in the judicial system. We are also working diligently to support the reference and research needs of local attorneys who are working remotely but still need access to all the library has to offer.

Virtual Reference Desk

The Law Library’s Virtual Reference Desk is here to help with your legal research needs during this time of public health concern. Our law librarians are available via email and voicemail to assist with access to legal research materials. The Law Library has worked with vendors like Westlaw, Lexis Advance, Lexis eBooks, HeinOnline, and State Bar of Texas Practice Manuals to make documents available to you remotely. Email the Law Library reference staff or give us a call. We answer nearly 250 reference questions each month from self-represented litigants, attorneys, paralegals, and librarians, and we’re happy to help you, too!

Live Chat Reference

The Texas State Law Library and the Harris County Law Library have teamed up to provide online chat reference assistance Monday through Friday from 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. During this three-hour block of real-time interaction with law librarians from both institutions, we receive a steady stream of questions on everything from agriculture to zoning. If you would like to communicate with a member of the reference team directly, find us five days a week in Chat!

Remote-Access Digital Resources

The Law Library provides a one-stop landing page for different library patrons based on their unique information needs. To learn about accessing our electronic resources remotely, visit the Digital Resources page. Here you will find links assembled for various patron groups including Self-Represented Litigants, Legal Researchers, Educators, and the Courts.

With so much growth in recent years, we are excited to see what the future holds. We are eager to implement even more new ideas as we begin our next year of service to the Harris County community. We will continue to embrace and be responsive to the changes taking place in society at large. On the occasion of our anniversary, we are renewing our commitment to serving Harris County residents and the local legal community, no matter how changes brought about by the ongoing public health crisis may shape our methods of delivering the best legal reference service possible.

Jury Service in the Age of COVID

Icons made by freepik.com from Flaticon

Icons made by freepik.com from Flaticon

On Monday, September 28, Harris County District Clerk Marilyn Burgess reminded residents that limited jury service is set to resume in Harris County and that they are still required to respond to the jury summons. The press release was no doubt prompted by the September 18 order from the Supreme Court of Texas postponing the start of in-person jury proceedings in justice and municipal courts until December 1. Burgess emphasized that although jury service was suspended for the Houston Municipal Courts, Harris County District and County Courts are set to move ahead, especially in light of the over 90 requests for jury panels in the month of October alone.

Because the facilities at Jury Assembly are still under construction after being damaged by Hurricane Harvey and because the temporary facilities in the Harris County Administration Building were too cramped to adequately allow for social distancing and proper safety measures, the County has made arrangements to hold jury selection at NRG Arena. In anticipation of the resumption of jury service, the District Courts of Harris County and the Harris County District Clerk have recently revised their websites to offer prospective jurors more information about jury service, especially in the age of COVID-19, stressing not only the importance of juries in our democratic society but also the efforts being made to ensure a safe environment for jurors, attorneys, judges, and litigants. On their website, the Harris County District Courts outline the safety protocols that have been implemented at NRG Arena as well as the downtown courthouses. There are detailed instructions explaining what jurors should expect upon their arrival at NRG and upon entering three key areas: the arena itself, the jury seating room, and the voir dire room. For those selected to serve on a jury, there are descriptions of the safety measures and protocols that they will encounter upon entering the downtown courthouse and their assigned location. In addition to safety measures, the District Court website has specific information depending upon whether you are a juror, a lawyer, or a self-represented litigant. Jurors can find general juror information, such as qualifications and exemptions, and information about what to do, what to bring, and what to wear. Lawyers can find answers to questions about safety, pretrial matters, jury call/voir dire, and trial and courtroom questions. Individuals representing themselves have access to self-represented litigant guides, legal aid organizations, and answers to some frequently asked questions regarding face coverings and Zoom hearings. It is also recommended that self-represented litigants view the information for lawyers.

Jury service in Harris County requires pre-registration. People receiving a jury summons are directed to visit the website of the Harris County District Clerk to begin the process and to receive their juror assignments. To address concerns that prospective jurors may have about serving on a jury in the age of COVID-19, the District Clerk’s Office has prepared a video about jury service at NRG, found under the COVID Precautions tab, explaining what jurors can expect at NRG and the safety protocols that have been implemented. Answers to questions about jury service, in general, including eligibility requirements and statutory exemptions, can be found on the About Jury page. Additional information about jury service, such as what jurors should wear and bring and what they should do in the event of an emergency that prevents them from being able to appear for service, is available on the District Clerk’s website under the Getting Prepared tab. Lastly, the District Clerk has gathered a number of downloadable educational resources that can be used by prospective jurors, teachers, and corporate partners to more fully understand the jury process and to recognize the value of jury service to our community.

In Celebration of Punctuation

Let's Eat Grandma.PNG

A lot of the work we do as librarians is investigative in nature. Secretly, there are many detectives among us. We are a curious lot who always want to know more. We can also be a fussy bunch who like words and language and who insist on using the most appropriate reference sources to get. things. right. We appreciate the rules of grammar, spelling, syntax, and punctuation and enjoy discussing the merits of various style guides. Copy editing, at least for this librarian, holds great appeal (as does the lost art of sentence diagramming).

In honor of National Punctuation Day, which falls every year on September 24, we at the Harris County Law Library are paying tribute with a list of resources that highlight the important role of punctuation and grammar in the drafting and interpretation of the law. Few disciplines outside of law rely so heavily on the written word. Disputes over misplaced (or missing) commas, especially in contracts and legislation, and even in the United States Constitution, are just some of the persnickety punctuation problems to plague the process. See below for examples of apostrophe catastrophes, comma bombs, and more.

·         The Law and Punctuation — In Custodia Legis, Law Library of Congress

·         Punctuation and the Law — American Bar Journal

·         Punctuation and the Interpretation of Statutes — Connecticut Law Review

·         How A Comma Gave Americans The Right To Own Guns — Business Insider

·         The Commas That Cost Companies Millions — BBC

·         Commas in Court Cases — Online Writing Training, Mary Morel

·         The Most Expensive Typo in Legislative History — Priceonomics

·         The Supreme Court is Split on Apostrophes — ABA Journal

·         Supreme Court Splits…on Grammar Writing and Style — Scribes Journal of Legal Writing

·         The Apostrophe's Battle Is Mountainous — The Atlantic