Summer Job Prep

Do you have a summer job lined up? Are you still hoping to nab a prized internship? Whether you know exactly where you’ll be working this summer yet or not, you’ll want to attend the library’s “Top 10 Ways the Library Can Help You This Summer” workshop on April 20. The law librarians will introduce you to resources you can use (even if you’re nowhere near the library itself) and offer advice on ways you can shine on the job.

And if the thought of all that good advice isn’t enough, we’re also be offering pizza and drinks to all attendees. Remember: April 20. We’ll be in Room 311 from 12 – 1 p.m.

Space is limited! Sign up now.

New DVDs to Check Out

More DVDs have been added to the Leisure Collection. Not sure what to check out first? Here are a couple suggestions for whichever topic you’re currently focusing on.

Law school: The first two seasons of The Paper Chase (yes, there was a TV show too)

Legal Practice: Matlock (seasons 1-3)

Ethics and PR: House (seasons 1-6) or Boston Legal (seasons 1-5)

Police Procedure: The Wire (seasons 1-5)

Not sure you’re ready to commit to a full TV series? We’ve also got new movies like The Social Network, You Don’t Know Jack, Never Let Me Go and Gattaca (all with suitably legal-related issues, of course).

New Library Printers

The law library has two new printers in the alcove (across from the Reference Desk). You will need to download new software if you want to print from your laptop to these printers. The instructions and software are available on our website. Alternately, the Circulation Desk also has a copy of this software on a USB drive — you can check the drive out, install the software, and return the drive.

In addition to simply being shiny and new, these printers are also capable of printing on both sides of a sheet. Look at the printer options on your computer when you send a print command to use this feature.

The old library printer will stick around until March 21. After that, you must install the new software to continue printing in the library.

Questions? Ask a library staff member or contact the IT Help Desk.

Presidents’ Day … Or Not?

by Flicker user ableman

On Monday, Feb. 21, many Americans will celebrate the federal holiday known as Presidents’ Day. Kids will be off school (not us, unfortunately), the post office won’t deliver the mail, and images of George Washington and Abraham Lincoln will be used to shill for everything from cars to sweaters.

Except. Did you know that, officially, Presidents’ Day doesn’t exist? The third Monday in February was designated “Washington’s Birthday” by the Uniform Monday Holiday Act (Pub. L. 90-363) in 1968 and that remains its official title to this day. The misnomer “Presidents’ Day” comes from the holiday’s close proximity to both Washington’s (Feb. 22) and Lincoln’s (Feb. 12) birthdays. The bill’s proponent himself tried to rename the holiday Presidents’ Day, but that initiative died at the committee level, with one committee member saying, “Certainly, not all Presidents are held in the same high esteem as the Father of our Country. There are many who are not inclined to pay their respects to certain Presidents. Moreover, it is probable that the members of one political party would not relish honoring a President from the other political party whether he was in office, no matter how outstanding history may find his leadership.” And yet, we all call it Presidents’ Day. You can read more about this act with the National Archives.

You can also check out some of the law library’s books on the presidents. We’ve got books on Washington and other Founding Fathers, as well as multiple titles on individual presidents, like those on Lincoln and the Supreme Court or Lincoln as a lawyer.

Online Room Reservations

Study rooms can now be reserved online

Study rooms can now be reserved online. The new online booking system also allows you to reserve a room up to one week in advance.

To reserve a study room, visit the booking system website and login using your myLAW ID (click the “Log in” button in the upper right corner of the page). You can reserve a study room for up to three hours per person per day.

You are responsible for canceling reservations if your group no longer needs the study room and for ensuring two or more members of your group are present to check out the study room key within ten minutes of the reservation start time. More information about these and other study room polices is on our policy page.

If you have any questions or problems, please contact the Circulation Desk (404/413-9100).

New Library Workshops

Library Abridged LogoThe law library is launching a new workshop series this spring. Each “Library Abridged” workshop will be 20 minutes long and focused on a narrow aspect of legal research, technology for lawyers and more. Coffee will also be served.

Workshops will meet in the law library conference room. And each workshop will be given twice, at 2:45 p.m. on Mondays and at 5:20 p.m. on Tuesdays. The full schedule is below:

  • Jan. 24 & 25 — A Professional’s Guide to Facebook
  • Feb. 7 & 8 — Let Me Google That For You
  • Feb. 21 & 22 — Better Know Your States: 50 State Surveys
  • Mar. 14 & 15 — Listening to the Law: Audiocasefiles
  • Mar. 28 & 29 — Take the Law Into Your Own Hands: eBooks
  • Apr. 11 & 12 — There’s an App For That: Apps For Lawyers

Although each workshop is independent from the rest, each student who attends the full series will receive a certificate of completion. Plan to join us this semester and top off your legal research skills.

Welcome back!

Welcome back to the spring semester! We hope your winter break was enjoyable. You may notice some small changes as you research this semester.

The library Reference Desk hours have changed slightly. Our new hours are:

Monday – Thursday: 8:30 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Friday: 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday: 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Don’t forget we are also available for chat reference and by phone during these hours as well.

You may also notice that both Westlaw and LexisNexis look a little different this semester. LexisNexis now features a “cleaner, more modern look” (to quote one of their emails about the change); although some tabs and databases have moved, you’ll find the site functions quite similarly to the way it did last semester.

Westlaw has also released its much-discussed WestlawNext client to law students. You can now access both WestlawNext and “Westlaw classic” when you login.

If you have any questions or comments about these new changes, feel free to ask one of the reference librarians. You can also contact LexisNexis or Westlaw directly.

 

Relaxing Over Break

Law Library Leisure Collection

Finals are nearing their end. Three weeks of vacation stretch before you in glorious Technicolor. You find yourself thinking, “Gosh, what a perfect time this would be to catch up on the first seven seasons of Law & Order. If only I had access to them!”

Oh, but you do. The law library’s leisure collection not only has all the “ripped from the headlines” stories you might want, but it offers more TV shows like The West Wing as well as Legally Blonde, 12 Angry Men, Breaker Morant and other movies.

If you’re thinking more about curling up with a good book and some eggnog, we’ve got you covered too. Cozy mystery fans can work their way through Lilian Jackson Braun’s The Cat Who series. Maybe A Christmas Carol has put you in the mood for some Dickens. And there’s always John Grisham’s legal thrillers too.

The leisure collection offers a lot of selection. Whether you’re wanting a light mystery or a legal classic, swing by the 130s study rooms to check out some great holiday break choices.

Fighting For Superman

image: flickr user b-tal

Warner Bros. recently announced that Zack Snyder (300, Watchmen) is going to direct a new film version of Superman. The casting rumors have begun, and the studio wants to start filming in June 2011, it’s reported. But it’s only been four years since Superman Returns was generally panned. What’s the big rush?

The flurry of activity is due to ongoing litigation between Warner Bros. (which owns DC Comics) and the heirs of Superman creators Joe Shuster and Jerry Siegel. Shuster and Siegel sold the Superman rights in 1938 for $130.  They’ve been trying to get them back ever since. Although the exact parties have changed over the years (with Shuster’s and Siegel’s heirs eventually on one side and various iterations of Warner Bros. and DC on the other), the question of who-owns-what is still not settled.

In 2008, the United States District Court for the Central District of California ruled that Siegel’s heirs are entitled to partial copyright of Superman’s character (542 F.Supp.2d 1098), but left several other issues unsettled.  Shuster’s heirs have also stepped into the fray and after several hiccups, the parties are set to begin discovery. The new Superman film is one way Warner Bros. is trying to minimize economic losses, whatever the outcome of the suit may be.

Superman isn’t the only comic book character to make an appearance in copyright jurisprudence. For example: Snyder’s previous film, Watchmen (based on a graphic novel of the same name), was subject to a fierce lawsuit (630 F.Supp.2d 1140) prior to its release in theatres. And Neil Gaiman and Todd McFarlane went to court (360 F.3d 644) over characters created for the Spawn series. The judge in that case described one Spawn character as “a kind of malevolent Superman figure, although actually rather weak and stupid” and appended the opinion with cover art and other images of the characters in question. These cases themselves now appear in treatises, ALR annotations and law review articles on copyright law.

The University Library has a large collection of comic books and graphic novels available for check out, including Watchmen, works by Neil Gaiman and Superman titles.

Thanksgiving Pardons

Nixon was one of many presidents to receive a Thanksgiving turkey (image: National Archives)

George Washington issued the first presidential proclamation on Thanksgiving when he declared Nov. 26, 1789 to be a day of “national thanksgiving” in which a new country was invited to acknowledge their “opportunity peaceably to establish a form of government for their safety and happiness”.

Since that first proclamation, Americans have made Thanksgiving one of our most celebrated holidays. Presidents even get in the act by granting a chosen turkey a presidential pardon. Most people think that presidents have been pardoning Thanksgiving turkeys since the 1940s. But while there is ample proof of presidents receiving turkeys, it wasn’t until George H.W. Bush pardoned one in 1989 that the tradition was formalized. (In fact, there is some suspicion Truman and his family ate the turkeys they received.) However the tradition got started, it will continue again this year when President Obama pardons a turkey on Wednesday, Nov. 24. The newly-pardoned turkey will then bring the Thanksgiving tradition full circle by moving to Mount Vernon, George Washington’s home.