Fireworks Laws in Georgia

fireworks image

Image by Flickr user joelmann

It’s almost July 4. A time for barbecues, the annual viewing of 1776, and that most-beloved tradition: fireworks. There are fireworks displays all over Atlanta, starting tonight. Or, if you prefer to stay inside, there’s even an app for that.

Fireworks are one of those topics on which state laws vary significantly. In Georgia, fireworks are regulated by O.C.G.A. § 25-10-1 et seq. Here, among other things:

  • the term “fireworks” does not mean model rockets or toy pistols with paper caps (25-10-1),
  • a license is required for anyone wanting to put on a public fireworks display (25-10-3.2),
  • not having a license is a felony and is punishable by 2-10 years in prison, a fine of up to $10,000 or both (25-10-8),
  • it is illegal to employ anyone under the age of 18 to work at a public display or where fireworks are stored (25-10-4.1), and
  • it is negligence per se to sell fireworks to a minor (Allen v. Gornto, 100 Ga. App. 744 (1959)).

We hope you all have a happy — and safe — July 4!

Summer Exam Prep

Image by Flickr user albertogp123

It’s summer time! Time for amusement parks and vacations, internships and exams. If you’re starting to think about another round of law school exams, don’t forget the great selection of resources we have to help you prepare:

Alumni Access to the Library

Image by Flickr user thomashawk

Congratulations to all our graduating law students!

Did you know that you can still access the law library long after graduation? It’s true! As a law alum, you can continue to use the library facilities and collection throughout your career. Just a few of the perks of being alumni include:

  • on-site access to electronic databases, including LexisNexis Academic (federal and state cases, statutes and more)
  • access to the library whenever we are open, including exams
  • ability to borrow up to 5 books for 4 weeks at a time (with an alumni card, see below)
  • online renewal options and account review access
  • a wealth of Georgia practitioners’ resources, such as civil and criminal forms, topical treatises and handbooks
  • research assistance from the librarians
  • a Bloomberg Terminal
  • printers, copy machines and a scanner (email and flashdrive enabled)
  • so much more!
Now, there are a few restrictions too. For example, you won’t be able to access our electronic resources from off-site. We also aren’t able to borrow books from other libraries (via ILL or GIL Express) for you. And finally, you must have an alumni card to borrow books. To obtain an alumni card, contact Alumni Affairs (Alumni Hall, 30 Courtland Street, Suite 133  — or — 404/413-2190) to arrange for your card. A $50 donation is required.

We hope that you continue to see the law library as a resource throughout your career!

Summer Reading Suggestions From Your Professors

by Flickr user chaparral

Exams have begun, and maybe you can even see the end of them. Just in time for summer, here are some reading suggestions from your professors.

Russell Covey

I recently discovered a new favorite author — David Liss. Liss writes historical fiction. Many of his plotlines revolve around stock market manipulation and financial treachery. I highly recommend the Coffee Trader (about the attempt of a Jewish merchant in 15th century Amsterdam to corner the new European market in coffee), The Whiskey Rebels (an engrossing story set in post-revolutionary Philadelphia, New York, and Pittsburgh, involving all of the monumental figures of the day engaged in an epic battle over the financial fate of Hamilton’s Bank of the U.S. and of the new republic, exposing their very human motivations – greed, lust, honor, etc. – that brings them to life as real people), and, on a different note, The Ethical Assassin (trust me, very different, but equally engaging). And a bonus reason to read Liss – he’s a GSU graduate.

William Edmundson

I’ve enjoyed William Prescott’s History of the Conquest of Peru. Prescott was a 19th century Boston lawyer who happened also to be blind. The conquest is a story of treachery and brutality that disgusted even some of those who took a leading part in it. Prescott is never indignant but never misses an opportunity to point out how our interests shape our perceptions of our deeds. As Prescott was aware, most of the sources he had to rely on were suspect, and there is a wealth of archival material that has come to light since he wrote. So, there are more accurate histories but I would be surprised if there are many better stories.

Anne Emanuel

Population 485 by Michael Perry. A sleeper I would have overlooked but for the keen eye and good advice of the owner of a small independent bookstore. I can’t do better than the description on Amazon: “Welcome to New Auburn, Wisconsin, where the local vigilante is a farmer’s wife armed with a pistol and a Bible, the most senior member of the volunteer fire department is a cross-eyed butcher with one kidney and two ex-wives (both of whom work at the only gas station in town), and the back roads are haunted by the ghosts of children and farmers. Against a backdrop of fires and tangled wrecks, bar fights and smelt feeds, Population: 485 is a comic and sometimes heartbreaking true tale leavened with quieter meditations on an overlooked America.”

Jessica Gabel

Devil in the White City by Erik Larson. I usually don’t like non-fiction, but the action is riveting for a turn of a century book that meshes the architecture of the Chicago World’s Fair with the hunting grounds of a serial killer.

A Visit from the Goon Squad by Jennifer Egan – the ins and outs of the music industry told by way of a trek through time.

Bernadette Hartfield

I recommend The Warmth of Other Suns by Isabel Wilkerson.  It is a fascinating historical account of African American families who moved, or in some cases escaped, from the south to northern locales in the great migration.  It is very powerful and engaging, and it won many awards.  There are aspects of criminal, juvenile, family and race law throughout.  It’s available in paperback now, although it was only available in hardback when President Obama took it on his vacation last summer.

Wendy Hensel

The Art of Racing in the Rain by Garth Stein.  It’s the story of a widower and his daughter as told by the family dog.  It is a sweet and insightful book that is a great, quick read.

Cutting for Stone by Abraham Verghese.  It’s a complex story of a family of surgeons in Africa.  It is beautifully written and richly evocative.  It will stay with you long after the last page.

Nancy Johnson

The Litigators by John Grisham. If you want a fast page-turner, this book is for you. John Grisham books are usually not funny, but this time he wrote a funny story with interesting and sympathetic characters, Finley, Figg, and Zinc. The fate of the cholesterol drug lawsuit was inevitable, but there were some interesting twists along the way. There is lots of legal action, including the mistreatment of illegal immigrants, product liability law, and the hypocrisy of the drug companies. It is a very entertaining book.

Julian Juergensmeyer

Although it is law related – I still recommend The Lawyer Myth: A Defense of the American Legal Profession by Rennard Strickland and Frank T. Read. I just think it gives a perspective that we tend to miss when we are involved with the “law” – in whatever capacity – on a daily basis.

Basil Mattingly

Atlas Shrugged, Ayn Rand. A cure for ignorance, blood loss, and bedwetting. http://www.usatoday.com/money/companies/management/2002-09-23-ayn-rand_x.htm

Lonesome Dove, Larry McMurtry. A glimpse of our country before the bankers and lawyers got ahold of it. Great compilation of all of life’s essential priorities. http://rogerwallace.com/lonesomedove.html

Deborah Schander

I’ve just finished up The Agency trilogy by Y.S. Lee. It’s a young adult series about a teenage thief in Victorian England who is saved from the gallows and offered the chance to be trained in an all-female spy school. Just as Agatha Christie’s Miss Marple was the perfect sleuth because no one ever paid attention to the quiet old lady, under the same theory Mary Quinn is trained to work undercover in overlooked roles (lady’s companion, builder, maid). The stories go quickly, have plenty of action and just the right amount of romance. The books also delve into the uneasy juxtaposition of the native English population with the Chinese immigrants in east London during this time. The series includes A Spy in the House, The Body at the Tower and The Traitor in the Tunnel.

Roy Sobelson

Defending Jacob by William Landay. It’s the story of a family torn apart by their son’s arrest for murder of a school friend. This one is likely to appeal to lawyers and non-lawyers alike, as it has a gut-wrenching human element to it, as well as the necessary legal wrangling and drama we’d normally associate with a book by Scott Turow or John Grisham.

Leslie Wolf

For pure escapism, I highly recommend the Spellman series by Lisa Lutz.  The tales of this dysfunctional family of private investigators who live and work in San Francisco are told through the eyes of the immature, but outrageously funny, middle-daughter, Isabel Spellman.  Start with the first, the Spellman Files.  I found them like potato chips — you can’t read just one.  If you read them on your e-reader, so click on the footnotes.  While some are just informative, so add to the hilarity.

On a more serious note, Still Alice, by Lisa Genova, is a compelling description of a highly successful academic experience with early on-set Alzheimer’s. While fictional, the story rings true — indeed the author’s work has been embraced by the Alzheimer’s Association.

We Want Your Feedback!

by Flickr user heathbrandon

Do you wish the library Coke machine took debit cards? Or do you think that the Circulation workers are the friendliest people ever? Here’s your chance to let us know about it. The law library’s annual student survey is now available. Let us know what you think about study rooms, how you use the library, the Reference Desk and more.

How’s it work? Easy. Click the link above, take a couple minutes, answer a few questions and be entered to win a Target gift card.

We’d love to hear from you!

We’re Hiring!

The law library is hiring GRAs for the Summer and Fall 2012 semesters.  Research GRAs report to Pam Brannon, Faculty Services Librarian, and assist with faculty research requests. Reference GRAs work at the Reference Desk, primarily answering research requests for library users, and report to Deborah Schander, the Reference/Student Services Librarian. If you are interested in either type of work, we encourage you to apply. You can apply for one or both types of position. Applicants for the summer positions must be taking summer classes.

Summer GRAs receive one-half reduction in tuition as well as a $500 stipend.  Fall GRAs receive one-half reduction in tuition as well as a $1,000 stipend. To apply, please submit a completed application, resume, and your anticipated Summer/Fall class schedule to Deborah Schander by Friday, March 16, 2012.

Spider-Man’s Ongoing Legal Woes

by Flickr user wynlok

Popular sites around the country went dark yesterday in protest of the pending SOPA/PIPA copyright bills — and you might think I’d write about that. But nah. Let’s talk about the ongoing saga of the musical Spider-Man Turn Off the Dark instead.

The musical began as a collaboration between Bono and The Edge from U2 and director/writer Julie Taymor (most famous for directing the stage version of The Lion King). Stories quickly began to emerge about trouble. Cast members were seriously injured, others quit before the show even opened.  The preview period (full, live performances during which the show may still be tweaked before it officially opens) was extended again and again. Comic book aficionados said the script bore little resemblance to the original story. OSHA issued safety violations. In an unprecedented move, theatre critics began to review the show before it opened. It was infamous and massively in debt. And one day, Taymor was fired.

With new writers and a new director, the show officially opened in June 2011 and has been doing steady business ever since. Over New Year’s it set a record as the highest-grossing Broadway production in history, raking in $2,941,794 in a week (nine performances). You’d think that producers would be doing the dance of joy. But no. They’re locked in a legal battle with Taymor.

Taymor filed suit against the show’s producers in November (Taymor et al. v. 8 Legged Productions, LLC et al.). She is suing for “willful copyright infringement and breaches of contract arising from their unauthorized and unlawful use of Taymor’s copyrighted written works in the current hit Broadway musical[.]” Just the other day, the producers counter-sued saying “Taymor refused to develop a musical that followed the original, family-friendly ‘Spider-Man’ story, which was depicted in the Marvel comic books and the hugely successful  motion picture trilogy based on them. Instead, Taymor, who admits that she was not a fan of the Spider-Man story prior to her involvement with the Musical, insisted on developing a dark, disjointed and hallucinogenic musical involving suicide, sex and death.” Ouch.

You can follow the suit and find the original complaint, answer and other documents on Bloomberg Law. (If you don’t have a login yet, see a Reference Librarian).

And We’re Back

By Flickr user ToniVC

The winter break is over, and the law library is open for business once again. We have limited hours this week:

  • Jan. 3-6: 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. (with Reference until 5 p.m.)
  • Jan. 7&8: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. (Reference closed).

We resume our regular hours on Jan. 9 when classes begin.

Relax With the Law: Ace Attorney Video Games

The Blackacre Times has already introduced you to a law firm which created a video game to give applicants an idea of what the practice of law is really like. But maybe you aren’t interested in reality. You just want to relax, point and click, and shout “Objection!” a lot. Allow me to introduce you to the Phoenix Wright: Ace Attorney series. As Phoenix “Nick” Wright, you are a rookie attorney, just entering the legal profession. Each game sees you interact with the police, wacky suspects, a clueless judge and ruthless prosecutors as you investigate and try several cases.

The series has proved incredibly popular over the past decade. The original game has spawned two direct sequels, two spin-offs, a team-up with the popular Professor Layton game series, a couple of manga books, and an upcoming live action movie adaptation. To say nothing of Nick’s recent addition to the Marvel v. Capcom line up (in one move, he literally throws the book at opponents).  Not bad for one attorney.

As a budding attorney yourself, it won’t take you long to realize that the game play bears little resemblance to the US trial system. In some part, this is because you are after all playing a video game, but  mostly it’s because the games originated in Japan. Although some references and settings have been localized for an English-speaking audience, the games still primarily reflect Japan’s legal system, which is a mix of the European civil law system, with some American elements thrown in recently. If you need a justification for playing a video game during law school, just say it’s helping you “study comparative law”.

The Phoenix Wright games are available for the Nintendo DS, Wii and, most recently, through the Apple store for your iOS devices.