Ad hoc reading and odds and ends worth czeching out in terms of trends and patterns 
Creative legal eagle 
Lawyer Lunch As US Judge Tannenwald wrote in an oft-cited opinion, Diaz v. Commissioner:53 “the distillation of truth from falsehood . . . is the daily grist of judicial life.”  Diaz 
is also another good example for teaching about the importance of evidence in a case. legislative grace. their tenure in office is a matter of “electorate grace.” 
- Privacy, as Victorian Privacy Commissioner Paul Chadwick recently observed, is a freedom most noticed in its absence. Sadly, we only seem to appreciate what we had once it's gone.
- 
Ethics is an informal mode of control. “It’s the glue that stops excessive individualism.”
This hypocrisy is aptly articulated in the fable of two neighbors in rural 
England, one a lawyer, one a farmer. The farmer, circumspect of 
the lawyer’s wily nature, says to the lawyer, “sir, regrettably 
your ox hopped over the fence separating our properties and was 
gored by one of my bulls, and I wish to know whether I need to 
make reparations”. The lawyer responded that of course the 
farmer would have to make reparations and that he owed him 
one ox. To that, the farmer replied, “very good, because actually 
it was my ox that hopped the fence and your bull that did the 
goring. So I suppose you owe me one ox.” The lawyer then 
retorted that that was a different case with different facts and 
therefore different principles applied. Disagreeing that there 
could be a difference, the farmer rightfully exclaimed, “it does not 
depend upon whose ox is gored!”
Long odds: a history of gambling 
Human vice is the most certain thing after death and taxes, to paraphrase Benjamin Franklin. 
The Winning Odds: pounds 8 on a fruit machine: 600/1; pounds 50,000 scratch-card jackpot: 2.57 million/1; top prize on the Lottery: 14.5 million/1.
Akio Kashiwagi, a Tokyo-based gambler who had once won more than $6m at Atlantic City's Trump Plaza, loses close to $10m in six days at a baccarat table. The following year he is stabbed to death in his home at the foot of Mount Fuji. 
 Long odds: a history of gambling