Mitt Romney is like his dad Michigan governor George in any respect?
I don’t see it–but the Washington Post does. See “George and Mitt Romney: Like father, like son, until a political parting point“.
I don’t see it–but the Washington Post does. See “George and Mitt Romney: Like father, like son, until a political parting point“.
An ancient copper mining town invaded by old hippies with shiny new ideas, Bisbee is one of the few venues in America […]
The dance was popularized by a song and its accompanying footwork, “The Charleston,” by James P. Johnson in the Broadway musical “Runnin’ […]
WAC? is about happy clients–and how hard it is to get client service right. It’s also about happy lawyers, a prerequiste to […]
To most people who actually live in Washington, D.C., Jenkins Hill is the name of a now-defunct but enormously popular yuppie bar […]
On July 9 of this year, South Sudan, located in one of the poorest and troubled regions of the world, seceded from […]
Although I’ve voted for a Republican for president only once, watching two major GOP presidential candidates self-destruct these past few weeks has […]
The Paris Blog is by Americans, Canadians, Brits and Frenchmen who write about “the daily intricacies of life in Paris”. It’s edited […]
We think not–but let’s hear out a European leader who has wanted all along for Europe to start working again. The Economist‘s […]
See at Dan Harris’s consistently fine and useful China Law Blog this one by Rachel Buker: “How To Stop China-Based Domain Name […]
See this guest post by American prof Tim Flood at Richard Lewis’s Cross-Culture. Not sure I buy that “US optimism is inherently […]
Man up there, Hoss. Blog and comment under Your Real Name. You’re not Alexander Hamilton, James Madison or an Iranian dissident. Well–okay, […]
Lawyer, leader and Renaissance man, my friend Roy Herron is a smart, energetic and genuinely people-loving Tennessee state senator who many observers […]
As Greece forms a much-needed new government (MSNBC), some eyes turn to Italy. At the G20 summit that concluded in Cannes on […]
House built in 1819. Solitude, Lucy the Beagle, ghosts, Lily, me.
Do you practice law in a (1) “clients’ town” or (2) a “lawyers’ town”? The latter, very common, is a local culture […]
The following Customer Service Tip of American Express (its retail arm) comes to us via a youngish California employee of ours, and […]
Clients, Buyers, Customers, Patients, Consumers and The Served are First. Companies and Organizations are Second. The Workers (including Management) are Third. Got […]
Republished here from our original October 20, 2006 post. Work-Life Balance is the Employee’s responsibility–not Management’s. Let people who must work and […]
Apart from women who take care of themselves, lawyers who read more than CLE catalogues and a sizable part of the populace […]
Conan O’Brien delivered this address on June 12 at Dartmouth in Hanover, New Hampshire–where I would have attended college if it had […]
Our friend, client and “Breach” hero Eric O’Neill is now a familiar voice and face on CNN’s The Situation Room. See him […]
Because we–and no doubt many others, both friend and foe–would love it if there were no need for this damn blog. What […]
Our thinking tends to circle around established conventions whose basis is forgotten or obscure. —Daniel Pinchbeck in The Return of Quetzalcoatl (2006) […]
Are your kids hanging out with Pagans? Just a suggestion if you forget to buy the candy. Yes, Halloween–also called “Pooky Night” […]
This month through January 8 the Phillips Collection at Dupont Circle features Degas’s Dancers at the Barre which Lily and I had […]
