Talk of the LexBlogosphere: August 29, 2007
August 29, 2007
I’m down in the San Francisco Bay Area this week, and the weather is phenomenal: warm days, blue skies and clear full moons (anybody see the lunar eclipse early yesterday morning?) have been a far cry from what I’ve experienced in Seattle most of the summer. Anyone reading this blog should resent those LexBlog clients lucky enough to work from offices in San Francisco.
Some of the discussions for August 29:
- The rarely used Severin doctrine rears its head in a Division 2 case highlighted by John Parnass in Davis Wright Tremaine’s Washington Construction Law Blog.
- Is your MTSO’s data stored securely enough? That’s the question Bob Haugen at the Medical Dictation & Transcription Blog is asking this morning.
- According to Gerald Pugliese at the health blog Disease Proof, Dunkin’ Donuts is the latest restaurant chain to ban trans fats from their menus.
- The Brain Injury Association of New Jersey is hosting two seminars for parents of brain damaged students, and Stark & Stark attorney Bruce Stern has published their locations in his Traumatic Brain Injury Law Blog.
- Susan Mangiero recently published an article on pension clients in Mann on Wall Street‘s August 2007 issue, an excerpt of which is published in her blog Pension Risk Matters.
Don’t forget, if you are a LexBlog client who wants to be featured in Talk of the LexBlogosphere, e-mail me a post you are proud of on the day it is published and I’ll try to work it into my update.
Posted in: