Archive for October, 2011
Momentus EEZ-READ Green Reader
This site may be for sale or lease. Please email blackstonemarketing@rocketmail.com for details!

The EEZ- READ (pronounced Easy Read) is a high accuracy “bubble level” that will provide a quick reading of the green’s contours. When placed on the green, the EEZ-READ helps you to determine the break on the green, resulting in more putts being made through the course of a round.
Coast to Coast Legal Aid of South Florida | ONE Campaign | florida pro bono lawyers
The focus of the One Campaign is to engage more attorneys in providing pro bono legal services through their local legal aid programs by taking on ONE case. Put simply, the One Campaign speaks directly to the number one issue that many attorneys cite as an obstacle to providing pro bono legal services: time. Through the One Campaign attorneys are encouraged to take One case where they can utilize their unique skills to help regular citizens navigate the law. The One Campaign will also highlight both state and local opportunities that attorneys can take advantage of to provide these pro bono services. Pro Bono Celebration Week begins on Monday, October 26th at the Florida Supreme Court with a ceremony led by Chief Justice Peggy Quince.
The Right to Justice: The Political Economy of Legal Services in the United States (John Locke)

The Locke Institute is an independent, non-partisan educational and research organization, seeking to engender a greater understanding of the concept of natural rights, its implications for constitutional democracy and for economic organization in modern society. The aim of this book is to examine the role of powerful members of the organized Bar in the US, who exploit the rational ignorance both of their own colleagues and the wider electorate to pursue their own political agendas through the institution of the American Bar Association. The author’s intention is to destabilize the equilibrium established by the legal services bureaucracy and expose its behaviour and the consequences of the principal actors to the lens of public choice, by narrowing the range of that rational ignorance on which the special interests ultimately depend for political influence, and by identifying incentives for a regrouping of forces in the market place for legal services into constellations more favourable to the deserving poor.
The Right to Justice: The Political Economy of Legal Services in the United States (John Locke)