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The 4th of July fell on a super hot Wednesday this year.  The temperature here in Fayetteville, AR hit 98 degrees which tied record highs. Undeterred by the weather, the three amigos (I guess technically I am an amiga) set out on an early morning ride in the Ozarks. My two riding companions were Terry &  Larry and perhaps I should explain how we came to hang out at 6:00 in the morning.  I met Terry in an airport shuttle van when I noticed the gravel on the street that morning.  He put two and two together (gravel is a tad tricky on a bike), and told me he’d seen me out on my bike and wondered who I was. Larry is Terry’s neighbor and friend and they learned to ride together. The three of us have taken several rides together over the past couple of years, but it had been a while, and it was great to be reunited.

Our first stop after gassing up, was fueling ourselves.  We rode to Rogers, and stopped at a fun diner named Lucy’s, which serves breakfast all day. We had a great meal, probably too great, frankly, but hey, it was a holiday.  A guy who had been listening to our stories came over and introduced himself as a long time rider and collector of antique bikes.  He wished us a blessed day and safe ride, and with that we  paid the check and took off.

We headed north up 62 and made a left once we got to Gateway, Arkansas. This put us on Hwy 37  and in about 3 miles, into Missouri. We made a pit stop in Seligmann, Mo., at a convenience and liquor store.  I’m glad we did, because it had two things I’d never seen before.  There was large display of wine by the glass, giving new meaning to get ‘n’ go. The other was a room with two huge cigarette rolling machines.

From there we continued west on 37 past the turnoff for Roaring River State Park (a destination I highly recommend should you find yourself in that neck of the woods), to Hwy 90. This was a new ride for the three of us.  I’d discovered the route while looking for a different way home from Roaring River.  It is a lovely, low traffic road with great scenery and nice curves.  We enjoyed quite a relaxing Independence Day ride, with our American flags fluttering on the backs of our bikes. We left Hwy 90 at Hwy E, taking it South to Hwy 94 in Arkansas. This brought us in on the northern edge of Pea Ridge, Arkansas, which is famous for its military park.  We headed across Hwy 72 into Bentonville, Arkansas, home of Crystal Bridges art museum Walmart corporate headquarters.

By then, the day was reminding us that it would be a hot one, so we made a hydration stop and headed down Hwy 112 south into Fayetteville. Our early start got us home just as the day warmed up. It was the perfect start to the day, to spend time with Terry & Larry, two great guys and fun riding buddies.

This is the rebirth of a fun blog that languished while I took a sabbatical. Thanks for checking in, and I hope you’ll enjoy taking this journey with me. It’s a bit difficult to summarize this blog I’ll definitely be sharing about people, places, events, apps, passing on random musings (often funny or faith-fulled), academic news and travels–and frankly whatever else seems interesting on slow news days.  Thanks again for coming along. I hope you’ll enjoy the ride.  I look forward to sharing with, and hearing from you.

A Sunday afternoon ride.

Tuesday morning, bright and early, which is ironic after being up all night debating politics in the lobby bar, was Ann Killenbeck‘s presentation. She was on the New Scholars Workshop panel #6 on constitutional law and her talk was on diversity. Her thesis is that legal institutions need to do a better job of supporting the concept that diversity makes an important difference in the classroom and in legal education. She noted that there were flaws in a number of the studies presented to the Supreme Court and suggested that there was a need for additional research on that issue. She also pointed to the fact that there is pressure from the citizens of states where there have been referenda or valid initiative to do away with affirmative action and so the need to justify and given that sentiment that law schools need to be much more deliberate and careful in terms of justifying the value of diversity in the classroom. Professor Mark Killenbeck also attended the session as well.

Other members of Prof. Ann Killenbeck’s panel were Professor Anthony Schutz, University of Nebraska, who spoke on “The Dormant Commerce Clause Doctrine: Policing States’ Legislative Purposes in the Shadow of the Federal Commerce Power” and Prof. Mark Killenbeck provided him with some helpful questions and guidance on his paper. Professor Gilda Daniels from the University of Baltimore who spoke on “Voter Deception” which was a fascinating paper. If you have an interest in that, I would watch for that paper when it comes into print. And then Professor Ani Satz from Emory who spoke on “‘Equal Protection’ for animals.” The purpose of the New Scholars Workshop is to allow new scholars to vet their research and to get helpful comments and feedback from audience members so as you might imagine at a resort hotel in Florida at 8:00 a.m. on Friday, it was really neat that there were so many people in the audience to provide that guidance. The way the SEALS works is that each new scholar who is presenting a paper gets a mentor and they get very extensive comments from their mentor and the mentor may or may not be in the audience, I’ve seen the panels run different ways, but then the rest of the audience offers helpful encouragement and guidance as well. It’s a really good conference for new scholars. By the way, Professor Anthony Schutz from Nebraska has a real interest in working with other scholars in the agricultural law area and a very strong interest in that area so we need to have him meet our own (if he hasn’t) Professors Schneider and Kelley.

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