Might the Cowboys’ stadium deal actually work out?

cowboys stadiummain.jpgMitch Schnurman, business columnist for the Ft. Worth Star-Telegraph, thinks that the Dallas Cowboys stadium project (prior posts here) is — against all odds and economic sense — is shaping up to be a reasonable deal for the city of Arlington.
I remain skeptical of the true economic benefit of the stadium for Arlington citizens. However, make no doubt about it, the new stadium has reinforced the Cowboys’ position as Texas’ favored professional football team and it’s clear that the Texans remain light years away from challenging the Cowboys in that regard.

A remarkable Aggie resource

Aggie complaint.gifDespite Desmond Howard’s gaffe earlier this week, Texas A&M University is a fascinating and indelible part of Texas culture. Recognizing that stature, Texas A&M’s Cushing Library has undertaken a remarkable project entitled “The Historic Images Collection–Historic Images and Photographs of the Texas A&M Community.”
The collection is a treasure trove of interesting photographs, such as this one of a pre-1900s baseball squad. Another early baseball team is here, while this 1923 picture includes in the back row, second from left, King Gill, the original A&M ì12th Man,î and in the middle of the back row, Pat Olsen (the tallest one), a former major leaguer for whom the A&M baseball stadium is named. Finally, this picture of Aggie great Jacob Green from the 1970’s shows the Emory Bellard-era striped shoulder football uniforms.
This is only a fraction of the photos in this remarkable collection, so take a few minutes to peruse the archive. Aggies take quite a bit of ribbing in Texas for their dogged adherence to tradition, but that respect for tradition is a big part of what produced this wonderful collection.

Desmond Howard rides to the rescue of Longhorn fans

It’s been a tough month for Texas Longhorn faithful.
First, there was the demoralizing loss to Kansas State, which knocked the Horns out of any chance for a rematch with Ohio State in the BCS National Championship game. Then, the Horns laid an egg against arch-rival Texas A&M, allowing the Aggies to win their first game in that hallowed series in seven years. That bitter loss has prompted some good natured ribbing of Longhorn fans, who were due to descend a notch or two after last season’s magic national championship run.
However, leave it to ESPN college football commentator Desmond Howard to make things right again in Longhorn country. Seems as if Desmond is a little confused about which team from Texas is playing in the Holiday Bowl this year. So, when in doubt, Howard falls back on the one team from Texas that everyone knows. ;^)

More ripples from Kelo

eminent domain.jpgThe economic and legal impact of the Supreme Court’s controversial decision last year in Kelo v. New London has been a common topic on this blog, so this Institute for Justice press release on a property dispute that arose from a developer manipulating a local government’s eminent domain power for his own benefit:

A federal court has now approved an extortion scheme using eminent domain under last yearís Kelo decision. Unless the U.S. Supreme Court overturns the rulings, developers may threaten property owners, ìYour money or your land.î
Think this is an overstatement?
Consider what is happening right now in Port Chester, N.Y., to entrepreneur Bart Didden and his business partner, whose case will be considered for review by the U.S. Supreme Court on January 5, 2007.
With the blessing of officials from the Village of Port Chester, the Villageís chosen developer approached Didden and his partner with an offer they couldnít refuse. Because Didden planned to build a CVS on his propertyóland the developer coveted for a Walgreensóthe developer demanded $800,000 from Didden to make him ìgo awayî or ordered Didden to give him an unearned 50 percent stake in the CVS development. If Didden refused, the developer would have the Village of Port Chester condemn the land for his private use. Didden rejected the bold-faced extortion. The very next day the Village of Port Chester condemned Diddenís property through eminent domain so it could hand it over to the developer who made the threat.
The 2nd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld this extortion under last yearís Kelo eminent domain decision. The court ruled that because this is taking place in a ìredevelopment zoneî they couldnít stop what the Village is doing.

Read the entire piece. Is it any surprise that most property owners over on Richmond Avenue in Houston want no part of the new proposed Metro light rail line? Bad law makes for perverse incentives, particularly when the incentivized party can use the 800 pound gorilla of the state for private purposes.

The blog mob?

WSJ online.gifWall Street Journal assistant editorial features editor Joseph Rago doesn’t think much of blogs:

The blogs are not as significant as their self-endeared curators would like to think. Journalism requires journalists, who are at least fitfully confronting the digital age. The bloggers, for their part, produce minimal reportage. Instead, they ride along with the MSM like remora fish on the bellies of sharks, picking at the scraps.[. . .]
[Most blogs] are pretty awful. Many, even some with large followings, are downright appalling.
Every conceivable belief is on the scene, but the collective prose, by and large, is homogeneous: A tone of careless informality prevails; posts oscillate between the uselessly brief and the uselessly logorrheic; complexity and complication are eschewed; the humor is cringe-making, with irony present only in its conspicuous absence; arguments are solipsistic; writers traffic more in pronouncement than persuasion.

Larry Ribstein, who is on the cutting edge of writing on the impact of blogging, responds to Rago here and bores in on what is really going on here — blogging’s dilution of old media’s impact on the distribution and shaping of information to the public. Does Rago really believe that the old media’s approach to distributing and shaping information examined here, here and here is the best way to present reasonably complex issues to the public?
Moreover, another key utility of blogs is the linking to articles in newspapers, magazines and specialized journals that the reader probably would otherwise miss. For example, corporate law bloggers such as Professor Ribstein and Stephen Bainbridge have greatly facilitated the public and legal profession’s understanding and discussion of often misunderstood business law principles that otherwise would have been relegated to rarely-read law review articles and an occasional backpage op-ed. The linking process increases the efficiency of the distribution of information and often refines that information. That such flow of information may be accompanied with a blogger’s opinion of the information is really beside the point. Those opinions will be alternately illuminating, worthless or in-between, but the reader does not lose the ability to evaluate the information or the opinion.
Curiously, while a WSJ editor decries the proliferation of blogs, Peter Lattman’s WSJ Law Blog is one of the best blogs to emerge during 2006. Go figure.

Navy Coach Johnson is not happy

Paul Johnson 122006.jpgThis previous post introduced Navy head football coach Paul Johnson, who is a throwback to an earlier era before media relations reps and banal press releases. Coach Johnson took some questions the other day as he prepares the Midshipman to play Boston College in the Meineke Car Care Bowl in Charlotte on Dec. 30:

Q: You seem a little perturbed. Can I ask you why?
Johnson: Yeah, we didn’t practice very well.
Q: You had told me originally that you would only go full pads the first couple of days, but it looks like you are going to do a little more full pad work.
Johnson: Yep. We will probably go full pads every day right up to the game.
Q: Why is that?
Johnson: We haven’t exactly practiced the way I thought we should.
Q: Anything in particular you’re seeing?
Johnson: We are lackadaisical and have no focus. Other than that it’s been OK.
Q: Does hitting wake them up a little bit?
Johnson: I don’t know. It hasn’t yet, but it makes me feel better. I can’t him them, but they can hit each other.[. . .]

A little more entertaining than the typical platitudes emanating from most head football coaches these days, don’t you think? Considering how he has turned the Navy program around, I cannot understand what Alabama is waiting for — Coach Johnson would be an instant hit at Bama.

The Brownback judicial litmus test fails

brownback.jpgThis previous post reported on the political posturing of Republican Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, who was blocking a long-delayed judicial nomination by President Bush because the nominee had attended a commitment ceremony between a couple of gay friends. Well, Senator Brownback has finally backed off, but he still sounds demagogic even when he tries to do the right thing:

Senator Sam Brownback of Kansas, who blocked the confirmation of a woman to the federal bench because she attended a same-sex commitment ceremony for the daughter of her long-time neighbors, says he will now allow a vote on the nomination.
Mr. Brownback, a possible contender for the Republican presidential nomination in 2008, said in a recent interview that when the Senate returned in January, he would allow a vote on Janet Neff, a 61-year-old Michigan state judge, who was nominated to a Federal District Court seat.
Mr. Brownback, who has been criticized for blocking the nomination, said he would also no longer press a proposed solution he offered on Dec. 8 that garnered even more criticism: that he would remove his block if Judge Neff agreed to recuse herself from all cases involving same-sex unions.
In an interview last week, Mr. Brownback said that he still believed Judge Neffís behavior raised serious questions about her impartiality and that he was likely to vote against her. But he said he did not realize his proposal ó asking a nominee to agree in advance to remove herself from deciding a whole category of cases ó was so unusual as to be possibly unprecedented. Legal scholars said it raised constitutional questions of separation of powers for a senator to demand that a judge commit to behavior on the bench in exchange for a vote.

Senator Brownback “did not realize” that his proposal violated the separation of powers upon which the federal government is based?

Epstein on Seton Hall’s “ethics”

handcuffs122006.jpgIt all started a couple of weeks ago when Richard A. Epstein wrote the op-ed discussed in this post in which he decries the deferred prosecution racquet that coerced Bristol Myers into making a “contribution” to fund an ethics endowment at the prosecutor’s law school, Seton Hall.
Professor Epstein’s piece prompted a response from Seton Hall Law Dean Patrick Hobbs, who contends essentially that the ethics program is for such a good purpose that the school can overlook the serious breach of ethics that was involved in funding the program in the first place.
As you might expect, Professor Epstein has the last word in this WSJ ($) letter to the editor:

My Nov. 28 editorial-page commentary “The Deferred Prosecution Racket” brought forth a spirited but wholly unconvincing response by Patrick E. Hobbs, dean of the Seton Hall Law School (“Fighting the Infection of Unethical Behavior in Corporate Culture,” Letters to the Editor, Dec. 8). Dean Hobbs defends his law school’s decision to accept money for a business ethics program pursuant to the deferred prosecution agreement between the U.S. Attorney for New Jersey, Christopher J. Christie, and Bristol-Myers Squibb. It is sheer naivetÔøΩ to assume that BMS and its attorneys signed on, as Dean Hobbs suggests, because of their deep belief that “the wrong corporate culture can become a breeding ground for unethical and criminal behavior.” There’s no way that BMS would have made that donation if freed from the risk of corporate prosecution. To avoid the taint, let Dean Hobbs raise money for a worthy project from one of thousands of New Jersey firms not faced with the threat of federal indictment.
If anything, his defense of the BMS-Seton Hall gift shows just how cancerous DPAs can be. Any good course in business ethics would stress the dangerous institutional incentives put in play if DPAs can direct payments to public charities. Let’s posit that Seton Hall did nothing whatsoever to urge Mr. Christie to funnel money to it through the DPA. No matter: Once this precedent is set, it’s open season for every public institution to lobby prosecutors for a piece of the action. Worse still, nothing prevents these organizations from quietly supporting criminal investigations to increase the likelihood of such windfalls. The public should not tolerate any arrangements that introduce these third-party influences into the prosecutor’s office. Any excellence of Mr. Christie as a prosecutor or of Seton Hall in ethics reform are tainted by this gift, which the law school should return forthwith.
The systemic problems with DPAs, unfortunately, cannot be solved by Timothy Coleman’s proposal (Letter, Dec. 8) to incorporate the various mitigating elements of DPA into the underlying criminal case. That approach will only clog criminal trials with matters wholly irrelevant to guilt or innocence. And it will fail to soften the present dire consequences from the threat of prosecution. Similarly, it is unwise (and futile) to seek congressional legislation to eliminate the harsh collateral consequences of a federal indictment in other federal agencies. Even if enacted, that legislation would not keep state regulators from pulling their licenses. The downward spiral of DPAs must be stopped at its source, by insulating corporations (but not their senior officers) from criminal prosecution. The recent McNulty memorandum doesn’t shred the Thompson memorandum. But at least it is a start.

Game, set, match — Epstein.

Tributes to a marvelous teacher

lence (1).jpgToday is the birthday of the late Ross M. Lence, one of Houston’s finest teachers of the past generation. On Dec. 1st — the final day of classes for the fall semester at the University of Houston — I was privileged to be one of the speakers at the University’s memorial service for Ross at the A.D. Bruce Religion Center on the University’s central campus.
As with most anything that involved the reasonable Dr. Lence, the service was a joyous affair, alternately hilarious and moving. Bill Monroe, one of Ross’ colleagues at The Honors College, had one of the best cracks of the day when he passed along another colleague’s observation about the notoriously difficult-to-pin-down Dr. Lence:

“A colleague and mutual friend said that, for over a decade, he thought Lence was a liberal Jew from Chicago, only to discover that he was a libertarian Catholic from White Fish, Montana.”

After a festive reception at the UH Honors College, many of those who attended the memorial service walked across campus to Robertson Stadium to attend the Conference USA Championship game between the Houston Cougars and the Southern Mississippi, which the Coogs won in stirring style. All in all, a wonderful afternoon paying tribute to a dear friend and then an enjoyable evening of college football on a beautiful fall day in Houston.
The following are pdf’s of the tributes to Ross delivered at the memorial service. Take a moment to read a bit about a great teacher and fine man who influenced the lives of thousands of Houstonians over the past 35 years:

The program for the memorial service is here;
Bill Monroe’s opening and closing remarks are here;
Susan Collins, one of Ross’ colleagues in the UH Political Science Department, gave this tribute and also passed along this tribute to Ross for PS Magazine that Susan wrote with former UH Political Science Professor Donald Lutz, who was instrumental in bringing Ross to the University of Houston;
Ed Willems, a UH Professor Emeritus of Psychology and a longtime teaching partner with Ross, gave this heartfelt tribute entitled “Ross Lence: He taught students and me.”
Andy Little, one of Ross’ longtime students and a student advisor in The Honors College, read Ross’ moving essay On Teaching;”
My tribute to Ross is here, Harris County Treasurer-elect Orlando Sanchez’s tribute is here, and the tribute of Jeff Dodd, a partner at Andrews & Kurth who specializes in corporate securities law, is here; and
Finally, Honors College Dean Ted Estess was scheduled to reprise his moving eulogy that he originally delivered in July at Ross’ funeral mass, but he chose instead to pass along extemporaneously several anecdotes and observations about Ross, a couple of which brought the house down with laughter.

Inasmuch as Ross often used to help needy and deserving students financially, The Honors College has established a scholarship fund in Ross’ name. Donations to that fund may be sent to the Ross Lence Scholarship Fund, The Honors College, University of Houston, 212 M.D. Anderson Library, Houston, TX 77204-2001.

Progressive destruction

PICT0041.JPGAs noted in this post from earlier in the fall, the University of Texas began the next stage of its master redevelopment plan for D.K. Royal Memorial Stadium immediately after the Horns’ final home game of the season against the Aggies.
This stage involves destroying the “horseshoe,” the part of the stadium that wound around the north side. The horseshoe was built in 1926 for $125,000, but it is a remnant of the days when the stadium also served as a track stadium, so the seats in the horseshoe were far from the field and not a particularly good place to watch a football game. Thus, the horseshoe will be replaced with a new end zone facility that will be much closer to the field of play and, of course, include the ubiquitous ring of club boxes. The end zone seats will be finished in time for next season and the club boxes will be completed in time for the 2008 season.
horseshoe rendition.jpgBy the way, once UT got crackin’, it didn’t take long to knock out the old horseshoe, as the time-lapse photo sequence below reflects: