Monthly Archives: October 2005

IP/IT/Cyber- Conference Blog

Michael Madison writes,

I have set up a blog to track IP, IT, and Internet-related academic conferences.

The URL is http://madisonian.net/conferences/

Send conference announcements and save-the-date messages to
madison@law.pitt.edu

Suggestions for improving the resource are welcome.

I think this is a great idea. Thanks, Michael!

So here’s my first suggestion: in addition to the blog/RSS announcements, we need a way to display a calendar of forthcoming events in calindrical form. Right now, the calendar in the right margin shows the date you posted the announcement, not the date of the event.

If nothing else, I want an easy way for people to check that the date they are planning to have their event isn’t already taken.

Posted in Talks & Conferences | 1 Comment

UM’s Marni Lennon Wins National ‘Equal Justice’ Award

So I read this interesting blog post by Denise Howell, Google as KM, about how she uses Google’s RSS feed of news items about her firm to find out what her fellow lawyers are doing. And I figure, why not set up an RSS feed of Google news items about UM Law? And right away I score a hit about something big I didn’t know about: University of Miami School of Law Assistant Dean Marni Lennon — one of the most public-spirited members of the UM community — has been selected as the recipient of the 2005 Outstanding Law School Faculty or Staff Award from Equal Justice Works.

Lennon serves as Assistant Dean of Students, Director of Disability Services and Director of H.O.P.E., Helping Others Through Pro Bono Efforts. She received her undergraduate degree from the University of Southern California and graduated from UM’s School of Law in 1995.

Lennon established H.O.P.E. in 1998, offering a program to assess the desire for a public interest service within the law school community. The response was overwhelming, and the program has since grown to include multiple legal advocacy and community outreach projects.

Equal Justice Works will present the award to Lennon Oct. 27 during its national conference in Washington, D.C. The award honors a law school faculty or staff member who plays a pivotal role in developing a public interest ethic among law students.

Marni was a student in the first law class I ever taught, Civil Procedure I, fourteen years ago. She did well, and I think she’s forgiven me.

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Posted in U.Miami | Comments Off on UM’s Marni Lennon Wins National ‘Equal Justice’ Award

Wild Ghoulish Speculation

The internets are rife with wild ghoulish speculation that the Vice President might be named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the Plame prosecution. (Or worse?) We know so little about what is actually going on in Fitzgerald’s office — contrast this professionally run operation to, say, the Ken Starr ethics-free horror show — that all such speculation strikes me as wildly premature.

So let’s indulge in some even more wildly premature and irresponsible speculation in the nature of a parlor game: suppose Bush suddenly needs to appoint a new Vice President due to the unavailablity or resignation of the current incumbent. Who gets the nod?

The 25th Amendment provides, in Section 2, that “Whenever there is a vacancy in the office of the Vice President, the President shall nominate a Vice President who shall take office upon confirmation by a majority vote of both Houses of Congress.”

The GOP has a majority in both chambers, but it would obviously be desirable to have a candidate who gets a less bumptious reception than seems to be facing Ms. Miers. That might mean a Senator, a popular governor, a member of the Cabinet, or an elder statesman. (Or, given who is doing the appointing, not.) Unless the person named was somehow disqualified by age they would immediately have a giant advantage in race for the poisoned chalice of the GOP 2008 Presidential nomination.

An additional complicating factor here is that some believe that Bush promised Sen. McCain tacit support in 2008, or at least the absence of support for rivals, in order to get McCain’s full backing in 2004. But they don’t like each other much, and I somewhat doubt that Bush would choose McCain to be so close to the levers of power.

A popular governor like Jeb Bush would be a possibility, but that nepotism thing might be a little too cronyist to work. And that might also violate the deal with McCain, if in fact it exists.

Leave your ghoulish speculation in the comments. I’ll name my name below. Names should be people Bush would be likely to like, easily confirmable, and either likely to raise GOP fortunes, or boneheaded in a plausible way.

Update: Just to clarify, given the first comment, the point of this game isn’t who Bush should pick, it’s who he would pick. Thus criticizing a choice as too sycophantic or not sufficiently reality-based completely misses the point.

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Posted in Politics: The Party of Sleaze | 29 Comments

Prawfsblog on the Job Talk

PrawfsBlawg: A few (more) thoughts on the job talk offers ten job talk topics you should avoid at all costs.

It’s pretty funny.

What’s even funnier is that two of them might just make perfectly fine job talks if you did them just right…

Posted in Law School | 3 Comments

Where to Get Your Donuts in Ohio

There are not that many Froomkins in the USA: Indeed, I recall going to an exhibit of a Social Security computer as a kid in the late 70s, where you could run your surname through the system and find out how many SSNs had been issued to people with the same name, and the total was something like 17. (That doesn't count alternate spellings, of which there are many, for what is basically a transliteration from Russian.)

Over at froomkin.com we've collected the information we could about Froomkins 'round the world, and it's not a long list.

What are the odds, therefore, that there would be two people named “Michael Froomkin”1? And that the other one would make the best donuts in Ohio? In 54 varieties?

No one makes creme sticks like the Froomkins, loyal customers insist.

PlazaDonuts.jpg

Michael Froomkin, president of the company and son of co-founder Berkeley Froomkin, acknowledges that health concerns have hurt business over the years but he can’t say how much.

“People still like doughnuts,” he observes. “Doughnuts are still a staple breakfast item.”

Plaza Donuts, founded by brothers Irv and Berkeley Froomkin, who operated three Youngstown coal yards, opened its first store in Akron. Two years later Plaza opened its second store in Sharon, Pa., and 1963, the company opened its store in Liberty — still operating today and where its business offices are located. Of the first three stores, it’s the only one still operating. The other four are in Boardman, Girard, Niles and downtown Youngstown; all are supplied from the Liberty bakery.

The business remains a family affair. Irv’s sons, Craig and Howard, serve as vice president and secretary-treasurer, respectively. From time to time, both founders come in to help out, Froomkin says.

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Posted in Personal | 2 Comments

Meta-blogging State of Play III

There was a lot less on the blogs about the conference than I expected. The Terra Novans, for example, were (like me) too busy attending to write about it. Perhaps that is the sign of a really good conference.

Urs Gasser had thorough pre-conference thoughts. James Taylor Lewis Grimmelmann, The State of Play is Strong, best captures the flavor of the event, although Community Mobilization, hightlights another important aspect. Torill Mortsen reports on the debate I participated in,

And the audience like this debate. This is the topic that has this audience rocking, to the point that they actually line up in front of the microphone in order to ask questions or participate in the discussion. This is, if nothing else, good academic/intellectual theatre!

Exactly.

Posted in Talks & Conferences, Virtual Worlds | 1 Comment