no answers
the finished letter
in the envelope…
taken out again
on hold
branches in the window
wave wildly
![]()
cell phones
they find each other
in the mall
lingering in bed
the ceiling
has no answers
from Upstate Dim Sum (2004/I)
potluck
I had the NPR coverage of the Roberts’ hearings on from
the opening to the close today. Talk about lost opportunity costs –
even three Legal Underground coffee mugfuls of caffeine could not
forestall a nap after lunch. Any of the Judiciary Committee Senators
who thought they’d grab the spotlight today with their opening remarks
were deluding themselves.
Speaking of coffee, I followed a pointer from Dave Gulbransen
and Blawg Review 23, to Mediation Mensch, making it my first-timer weblog
for this week. Having been a mediation pioneer in my local area, I was very
interested in what Bostonian Dina Beach Lynch had to say. Sadly, I was
disappointed. First, Dina has not had a post since August 3rd. More important,
her discussion “Do You Want to Be Starbucks or Seven-Eleven?“ brought
back all the qualms about branding (and luring the “quality” client) that I
raised in Brand Lex and related posts. Lynch says her mediation practice
offers “affordable conflict resolution resource,” but she wants to offer the
ambiance of Starbucks, with its prices – and never even mentions whether
Seven-Eleven has good coffee.
Katrina News: Last Friday, I was very impressed with the viewers
of the NY Capital Region’s public radio station WAMC. We don’t have the
population base of a major metropolitan area, but the station received over
half a million dollars in donations for Hurricane Katrina relief in less than 8
hours of on-air solicitation. There were 4236 callers. A lot of people care a lot.
Prof. Bainbridge is looking for humorous legal rules of thumb.
You must have an exact quote and a link. Make your contribution.
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I had the NPR coverage of the 
Prof. 