Federal jurisdiction and practice still remains the lawyer\u27s dream world. As the editors here point out, before the 1934 Act authorizing new rules of civil procedure, federal practice was a comparatively placid pool, with the votaries thereof accepting with equanimity the complexities of conformity and the dominion of general law, peculiarities which however strange to the tyro possessed a pleasurable element of the esoteric. How true this was! The pleasures and the mysteries of the federal field were distinctly matters for the expert with the knowledge as well as the kind of mind to know and to enjoy these problems. Then came the persistent and successful reform of the procedure itself, but it was accompanied by a drastic revulsio...