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The Monday Morning Memo

Chuck Jones wrote the rules for a crazy new world in 1948. These rules have successfully guided the Road Runner & the Coyote for the past 76 years:

RULE 1:
The Road Runner cannot harm the Coyote except by going “BEEP-BEEP!”

RULE 2:
No outside force can harm the coyote – only his own ineptitude of the failure of the ACME products.

RULE 3:
The Coyote could stop anytime – if he were not a fanatic.
(“A fanatic is one who redoubles his effort when he has forgotten his aim.” – George Santayana)

RULE 4:
No dialogue ever, except “BEEP-BEEP!” 

RULE 5:
The Road Runner must stay on the road – Otherwise, logically, he would not be called Road Runner.

RULE 6:
All action must be confined to the natural environment of the two characters – the Southwest American desert.

RULE 7:
All materials, tools, weapons, or mechanical conveniences must be obtained from the ACME corporation.

RULE 8:
Whenever possible, make gravity the Coyote’s greatest enemy.

RULE 9:
The Coyote is always more humiliated than harmed by his failures.

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Random Quote:

“Every book is an island that exists only in the mind of its writer, and the hope of every writer is that you will visit their island and be glad you did. But in The Faraway Nearby, her book about how we make our lives out of stories, and how we are connected by empathy, narrative and imagination, Rebecca Solnit says,

‘The object we call a book is not the real book, but its potential, like a musical score or seed. It exists fully only in the act of being read. And its real home is inside the head of the reader, where the symphony resounds, the seed germinates. A book is a heart that only beats in the chest of another.’

I think of books as islands, but Rebecca Solnit thinks of them as sheet music, or as seeds. I followed that trail of thought until I realized that she and I had simply discovered different metaphors to describe how books are literary portals of escape into alternate realities.”

- Roy H. Williams, Monday Morning Memo for Oct 12, 2020

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