Thrift Shops

by Mark Stuckey

records by flickr user stevenmphoto

image by flickr user stevenmphoto

If you are like me, you are an over-worked, under-paid, stressed-out law student. This combo alone might be enough to drive even the most, dare I say, reasonable person crazy, but when you add the inescapable (believe me, I have tried) fact that I am living the life of a pauper to the jambalaya of my law school problems, it is enough to drive a man insane. To further exacerbate my issues, I love to shop. Boat shoes? I have 8 pairs. Ties? More than I care to count. You may ask, “How can you reconcile your overpowering desire to amass material possessions, and your equally robust preference to not live on the streets, avenues and boulevards of Atlanta?” Well my friend, I will tell you! For myself, and those similarly situated, I have found the solution to our woes, worries, and vexations in the form of thrift stores.

Thrift shops are perfect for law students on a budget. Where else can you get a camel hair jacket (circa 1986!), three dress shirts, and a monogrammed flask for sixteen big ones? I will admit that the shirts are all pink, and the initials on the flask were not my own, but c’mon, I know a deal when I see one. Apparently, I am not the only one; here is an entire subreddit of neat things found at thrift stores! The question is: what can you find?

Thrift shopping is not solely about the deals, but it is also about the thrill of the hunt. Much like the humpback in search of krill you have to be willing to sift through volumes of items to find something truly worthwhile. Some don’t have the patience or the will to thrift shop, and they will never know what I am talking about. You don’t have to be that guy (or girl)!

The main concern of a fledgling thrift shopper should be finding quality stores. Some stores are naturally better than others. Accordingly, you should do your research.  Here’s a pretty cool website that has a listing of a ton of stores in Atlanta. Go find your new favorite store!

A good staple for general items and clothing, and my personal favorite is Goodwill. You can find a Goodwill near you at this website. PRO TIP: Goodwill has a half off color of the week.

While I prefer to not be labeled a hipster, I must proudly proclaim that I was a thrift shopper well before it was cool. Macklemore has popularized thrift shopping with the youths with his catchy and aptly named melody, “Thrift Shop”.   I like to see thrift shopping glamorized… even if it means more competition for extraordinary finds.

You will never know what you cannot live without unless you look. So start searching!

Libraries and Secret Doors

There is a time-honored mystery cliché that if you pull on the correct book on a library shelf then a secret passage will present itself. As someone who works in a library I have always been fascinated by this idea. But unfortunately (having handled almost every book in this library at some point in time) I am sorry to report that there are no secret passages or secret rooms to be found in the Georgia State University Law Library- save for the door to nowhere located in Law Review. I am also sorry to share that despite my repeated suggestions to the architects, new building committee, and anyone else who will listen there will not be a secret passage in the new Law Library.

I am not giving up.

With an eye to persuade everyone that we could use a little mystery in the new law school building and particularly in the law library, I share the following lists of hidden doors, passages, and rooms:

Bookriot’s 10 Kick-ass Secret Passage Bookshelves

Huffington Post’s 10 Secret Rooms and Hidden Passageways

Buzzfeed’s 31 Beautiful Hidden Rooms And Secret Passages

Houzz’s list of secret rooms

And if all else fails, we can always build our own with a little help from B. Light Design

Not Your Typical Opinion

by Lindsey LaForge

judge by flickr user kylebaker

image by Flickr user kylebaker

After the monotonous reading of dry opinion after dry opinion in your casebooks, most would think that judges have no sense of humor. Yet, this isn’t the case! Judges are human beings like you and me, after all. Take a look at some of the humorous ways judges have kept things a little more light hearted than the personal and subject-matter jurisdiction cases we all had to read as 1Ls.

Judges who like to rhyme:

United States v. Batson, GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:
Some farmers from Gaines had a plan.
It amounted to quite a big scam.
But the payments for cotton
began to smell rotten.
Twas a mugging of poor Uncle Sam.
The ASCS and its crew
uncovered this fraudulent stew.
After quite a few hearings,
the end is now nearing-
It awaits our judicial review.
782 F.2d 1307, 1309 (5th Cir. 1986)

In re Love, A. JAY CRISTOL, Bankruptcy Judge:
Once upon a midnight dreary, while I pondered weak and weary
Over many quaint and curious files of chapter seven lore
While I nodded nearly napping, suddenly there came a tapping
As of some one gently rapping, rapping at my chamber door,
“Tis some debtor” I muttered, “tapping at my chamber door—
Only this and nothing more.”

Ah distinctly I recall, it was in the early fall
And the file still was small
The Code provided I could use it
If someone tried to substantially abuse it
No party asked that it be heard.
“Sua sponte” whispered a small black bird.

The bird himself, my only maven, strongly looked to be a raven.
Upon the words the bird had uttered
I gazed at all the files cluttered
“Sua sponte,” I recall, had no meaning; none at all.

And the cluttered files sprawl, drove a thought into my brain.
Eagerly I wished the morrow—vainly I had sought to borrow
From BAFJA, surcease of sorrow—
and an order quick and plain
That this case would not remain
as a source of further pain.
The procedure, it seemed plain.
As the case grew older, I perceived I must be bolder.
And must sua sponte act, to determine every fact,

If primarily consumer debts, are faced,
Perhaps this case is wrongly placed.
This is a thought that I must face, perhaps
I should dismiss this case.

I moved sua sponte to dismiss it
for I knew I would not miss it
The Code said I could, I knew it.
But not exactly how to do it, or perhaps some day I’d rue it.

I leaped up and struck my gavel.
For the mystery to unravel
Could I? Should I? Sua sponte, grant my motion to dismiss?

While it seemed the thing to do, suddenly I thought of this.
Looking, looking towards the future and to what there was to see
If my motion, it was granted and an appeal came to be,
Who would be the appellee?
Surely, it would not be me.

Who would file, but pray tell me,
a learned brief for the appellee
The District Judge would not do so
At least this much I do know.
Tell me raven, how to go.

As I with the ruling wrestled
In the statute I saw nestled
A presumption with a flavor clearly in the debtor’s favor.
No evidence had I taken
Sua sponte appeared foresaken.

Now my motion caused me terror
A dismissal would be error.
Upon consideration of § 707(b), in anguish, loud I cried
The court’s sua sponte motion to dismiss under § 707(b) is denied.
61 B.R. 558, 14 Bankr.Ct.Dec. 582, Bankr. L. Rep. P 71,201

Fisher v. Lowe, J.H. GILLIS, Judge:
We thought that we would never see
A suit to compensate a tree.
A suit whose claim in tort is prest
Upon a mangled tree’s behest;
A tree whose battered trunk was prest
Against a Chevy’s crumpled crest;
A tree that faces each new day
With bark and limb in disarray;
A tree that may forever bear
A lasting need for tender care.
Flora lovers though we three,
We must uphold the court’s decree.
Affirmed.
122 Mich. App. 418, 333 N.W.2d 67 (1983)

Judges say the silliest things:

Mattel, Inc. v. MCA Records, Inc., KOZINSKI, Circuit Judge:
-If this were a sci-fi melodrama, it might be called Speech–Zilla meets Trademark Kong.
296 F.3d 894, 898 (9th Cir. 2002)

Avista Mgmt. v. Wausau Underwriters Ins. Co., GREGORY A. PRESNELL, Judge:
-Instead, the Court will fashion a new form of alternative dispute resolution, to wit: at 4:00 P.M. on Friday, June 30, 2006, counsel shall convene at a neutral site agreeable to both parties. If counsel cannot agree on a neutral site, they shall meet on the front steps of the Sam M. Gibbons U.S. Courthouse, 801 North Florida Ave., Tampa, Florida 33602. Each lawyer shall be entitled to be accompanied by one paralegal who shall act as an attendant and witness. At that time and location, counsel shall engage in one (1) game of “rock, paper, scissors.” The winner of this engagement shall be entitled to select the location for the 30(b)(6)deposition
2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 38526 (M.D. Fla. 2006)

And apparently Chief Justice Roberts pretends to be a novel writer sometimes:

Pennsylvania v. Dunlap, Chief Justice ROBERTS, with whom Justice KENNEDY joins, dissenting:
North Philly, May 4, 2001. Officer Sean Devlin, Narcotics Strike Force, was working the morning shift. Undercover surveillance. The neighborhood? Tough as a three-dollar steak. Devlin knew. Five years on the beat, nine months with the Strike Force. He’d made fifteen, twenty drug busts in the neighborhood.

Devlin spotted him: a lone man on the corner. Another approached. Quick exchange of words. Cash handed over; small objects handed back. Each man then quickly on his own way. Devlin knew the guy wasn’t buying bus tokens. He radioed a description and Officer Stein picked up the buyer. Sure enough: three bags of crack in the guy’s pocket. Head downtown and book him. Just another day at the office.
555 U.S. 964, 129 S. Ct. 448, 172 L. Ed. 2d 321 (2008)

So next time enter a courtroom shaking with fear, remember those intimidating figures with the long black robes on are actually people too. Even the Supreme Ones.

Summer Relaxation

Moyan_Brenn

Flicker photo by Moyan_Brenn

Law students often use summertime to take classes, study for the MPRE, or intern. While these are all fine and good, it’s also important to add in a little down time.  Here are a few suggestions on how to unwind over the next few months.

Read a book?

Reading is the last thing you want to do, right?  However, don’t you remember those days prior to law school when you actually enjoyed getting lost in a good book? If you need book suggestions, check out Pam Brannon’s blog post “Read (Something Other Than Casebooks)!”

Watch a movie

The summer is the best time to get back into movie watching. The crop of current showings and upcoming releases are worth a view.  Some of the most highly anticipate flicks this summer include:

  • Iron Man 3 (May 3) – currently showing
  • The Great Gatsby (May 10) – currently showing
  • Star Trek Into Darkness (May 17) – currently showing
  • The Hangover Part III (May 23) – currently showing
  • Epic (May 24)
  • Fast & Furious 6 (May 24)
  • Now You See Me (May 31)
  • After Earth (May 31)
  • The Internship (June 7)
  • Man of Steel (June 14)
  • Despicable Me 2 (July 3)
  • Lone Ranger (July 3)
  • Grown Ups 2 (July 12)
  • The Wolverine (July 26)

Atlanta Summer Festivals

If you want to have a good time without leaving the area, check out some of the summer festivals going on in Atlanta. Some of the big ones include the Atlanta Summer Beer Fest, Virginia Highland Summerfest, 4th of July at Lenox Square, and the Decatur BBQ, Blues & Bluegrass Festival. For more information on local summer festivals, go to http://www.atlanta.net/festivals/festivalsSummer.aspx.

Beach

There is no better way to enjoy the summer than going to the beach. While Atlanta is not a coastal city, there are several beaches within driving distance. For information on nearby beaches, check out the AJC’s gallery entitled “Six beaches within driving distance of Atlanta.”

Baseball

The nation’s pastime takes center stage during the summer.  The Braves are currently leading the National League East Division and have several enticing home match-ups this summer, including the Mets, Giants, Pirates, Cardinals, and division rival Nationals. Access the Braves schedule at http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/schedule/index.jsp?c_id=atl#y=2013&m=5&calendar=DEFAULT. If you are on a budget, think about buying tickets through one of the Braves Special Offers: http://atlanta.braves.mlb.com/atl/ticketing/ticket_specials.jsp.

Soccer (a.k.a Football or Fútbol)

Whether you are a passionate fan or casual viewer, you are sure to get a kick out of the 2013 CONCACAF Gold Cup. Atlanta will host two quarterfinal games on July 20th. Match-ups will depend on the results from the group stages, but fans could expect to see Mexico (“El Tri”) in at least one of the games. For tickets, go to http://www.ticketmaster.com/CONCACAF-Gold-Cup-Quarterfinals-tickets/artist/1836368?brand=none&tm_link=artist_rc_name1.

My Favorite Legal Terms

by Hanish Patel

Image by Flickr user your_teacher

Image by Flickr user your_teacher

You may be lying (or perjuring) if you claimed you did not have a favorite legal word. Essentially, a legal term is a vast and abstract concept, spanning generations from our legal ancestors, boiled down to a few syllables. So, here is a syllabus of my personal favorites – some you might have never heard of, some you may be trying to forget:

Lex loci (leks LOH-ky) – noun: the law of the place. From the Latin lex (law) + locus (place). Earliest documented use: 1832.  Note: The doctrine of lex loci holds that the law of the jurisdiction where the act was done applies.

Suborn (suh-BORN) – transitive verb: to induce to perform an unlawful act or give false testimony. Earliest documented use: 1534.

(Writ of ) Mandamus (man-dame-us) – noun : a writ or order issued from a court ordering a public body to perform an act when it has neglected or refused to do so. From the Latin, We Command. Note: The jurisdiction to issue writs of mandamus was a core issue of Marbury v. Madison.

Precatory (PREK-uh-tor-ee) – adjective: expressing a nonbinding wish or suggestion. From the Latin, precari (to pray). Note: precatory language in a statute or will is merely suggested, but not legally binding. For example, “I hope my son uses the land for farming.”

Curtilage (cur-ti-lage) – noun: the area, generally enclosed, encompassing the grounds and buildings immediately surrounding a home. From the French, cortillage (court, yard).

Prima facie (pry-muh fey-shee) – noun: an initial burden of proof made apparent from the facts. From the Latin, primus (first) + facies (face). Earliest documented use: 15th century

Surplusage (SUR-pluhs-ij) – noun: irrelevant matter; an excess of words. Note: statutory interpretation aims to construct statutes and legal language as ignoring or avoiding instances of surplusage.

Littoral (LIT-er-uh-l) – adjective: pertaining to the shore of a body of water. Note: Littoral rights refer to the rights concerning property that abut a body of water such as an ocean, lake, sea, rather than a river (riparian). For instance, littoral rights may include rights to the tidal waters as well as the underlying land to a certain point.

Of course, you can always find more fascinating words using Black’s Law Dictionary.

Toward Better Googling

frustration

Photo by Syben Stüvel.

There’s this idea floating around that, as librarians, we’re supposed to tell you not to “just Google it.” But the reality is that, well, that works sometimes. The problem that many people have with finding information on Google, though, is that they don’t know all of the different tricks you can use to make your Google search more efficient.

Next time you’re searching Google and not finding what you want, try these out:

  • Use quotation marks. Just like in Lexis and Westlaw, quotation marks in Google can be used to find phrases.
  • Seriously, use quotation marks, even for single words. One way that Google helps you is by automatically including results with words related to the term you searched. However, if you only want to find the word you searched and no other related words, you need to put that word in quotation marks. To see this in action, just look at the difference between this search and this search.
  • If you want even more related words, use a tilde. The tilde (~) before a word will bring back search results with a broader list of synonyms. (Also, you now know that that symbol is called a tilde.)
  • Limit your search to a specific site or domain. Want to just search government websites? Include this in your search: “site:.gov” Want to just search the College of Law’s website? Include “site:law.gsu.edu”
  • Limit your search to a specific filetype. You may have noticed that reports are usually put online as PDF files. You can limit your search to just PDFs by including “filetype:pdf” in your search. This works with any file extension – try it out to find Word documents, Powerpoints, etc.
  • Change the order of the words. The order of the words matters in Google’s search algorithm. To see the difference, just try searching for “state georgia” and “georgia state.”
  • Use wildcards. The asterisk (*) is a wildcard operator for words in Google. You can’t use a wildcard for a single character, but you can use it for a word. So do you have a phrase where you think one or more words might change? Use a wildcard to replace them. It works great with misheard song lyrics.

Google has a page that you can consult with more tips and tricks. You can also take a couple of online courses on better searching.

Coffee, Kittens, and Other Exam Info

kitten by flickr user plizzba

Image by Flickr user plizzba

Another season of exams have begun. And once again, the library is here to provide you with what you need most: caffeine and cute.

There will be free coffee available in the law library conference room throughout the exam period. Stop by any time!

The library’s digital screen is in stress relief mode. Also throughout the exam period, come see a rotating display of pugs in swings, curious donkeys, inquisitive ducks, and other cute animals.

And if that’s not enough for you, we also have study aids, ear plugs, flash cards, study rooms, and more.

Good luck on your exams!

Read (Something Other Than Casebooks)!

Photo by Flickr user aafromaa.

Photo by Flickr user aafromaa.

We know – finals are about to get underway, and you don’t have time right now to read anything other than casebooks and outlines. That’s OK. Because in a few weeks, finals will be over, and the summer will begin. Which means that you’ll have time to read for fun, because that’s a thing that people do, we’ve heard. We consulted with the College of Law faculty, and received from them the following suggestions for some lighter reading. (If you want more suggestions, see our previous lists.) You know, for when exams are done (because exams will be done).

Pam Brannon

It’s almost impossible to overstate the influence The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy, by Douglas Adams, has had on me. I first read it when I was still in elementary school, and I can’t count how many times I have read it since then. I’m reading it again right now, actually. I’ve been trying to think of a way to describe it, and the best way I can think of is to say it’s impossibly funny. And impossibly influential. If you have any geek leanings at all and haven’t read Hitchhiker’s Guide, a lot of references will be explained once you read it. The importance of towels and the number 42. The Radiohead song “Paranoid Android.” Also, it has a character named Slartibartfast. That’s amazing.

Mark Budnitz

The Burgess Boys, Elizabeth Strout. This is a story about two brothers living in New York, one a corporate lawyer, the other a legal aid attorney doing criminal appellate work. They both go home to Maine to help their nephew who has been accused of committing a hate crime.

Russell Covey

Gone Girl, Gillian Flynn. Flynn’s latest book, Gone Girl, is definitely her best yet. The book tells the story of Nick, whose beautiful wife Amy disappears amid signs of foul play. With a bow to the famous Japanese film Rashomon, the book tells the story of Amy’s disappearance from both Nick and Amy’s viewpoints, giving rise to substantial questions regarding the reliability of the narrators. I would have ended the book differently, but that’s just me. It kept me on edge all the way through. Great beach reading.

William Edmundson

A Perfect Spy is one of John le Carré’s best. Another book, Single and Single, involves lawyers, and resembles A Perfect Spy in its plot line, though it is not quite as well turned. The resemblance is no coincidence, because David Cornwell (le Carré when he’s at home) had a father on which the father character (or father-figure) in both novels was modeled. What makes Single and Single singular is not only that its protagonist is a lawyer, but is a lawyer with both a senior partner and clients from Hell.

Anne Emanuel

The Gift of Rain, by Tan Twan Eng. Technically a historical novel set in Malaysia during WWII, it is extraordinarily gracefully written and, as the author says, “very strong on human themes… Relationships, aging, love…”

The Tiger: A True Story of Vengeance and Survival, by John Vaillant. Gripping. A beautifully written compelling tale. Not a book I would have sought out, but once it was put in my hands, not a book I could put down.

Lynn Hogue

I just finished reading Richard Ben Cramer’s book What It Takes: The Way to the White House about the 1988 presidential race. It was published in 1993, so many folks may already have read it. The author, Cramer, died recently, and I picked up on it from his NYT obituary. I found it fascinating. Several folks who ran then, e.g., Joe Biden, are still around. Anyway, I would highly recommend it. Cramer has a breezy style and a great eye for detail. The book is apparently popular with political junkies, but you don’t have to be one to enjoy the book.

Deborah Schander

Whenever I get stressed about something, or just want to relax with a book I know I’m going to enjoy, I pull out A Year in Provence by Peter Mayle for another read. Published in 1990, A Year in Provence became a literary sensation and can in large part be credited (blamed?) for the “author moves to another country and writes pithy comments about the experience” genre. But don’t worry about the hype. It deserves all its praise. Mayle is a wry, witty author who can find humor and pathos in the most random of events. Immerse yourself in a world of French plumbers who never seem to be on hand to do the work, neighbors who are trying to sell their ramshackle abodes for a fortune, and the descriptions of Provençal food. Oh, the food. Delicious.

Nirej Sekhon

Beautiful Ruins, Jess Walter. A gifted crime-fiction writer branches out with tremendous effect!

Roy Sobelson

The Orphan Master’s Son, Adam Johnson.

Ellen Taylor

My Beloved World, Sonia Sotomayor. Sotomayor’s new memoir is a great read, and very inspirational.

Anne Tucker

The Round House, Louise Erdrich. From the NY Times Review: “A Native American woman is raped somewhere in the vicinity of a sacred round house, and seeking justice becomes almost as devastating as the crime. The round house itself stands on reservation land, where tribal courts are in charge, but the suspect is white, and tribal courts can’t prosecute non-Native people. In a morass of laws, the judge handling the case is uncertain whether the accused man can be charged at all, the 13-year-old boy whose mother was raped pursues his own quest for justice. In the process, this young boy will experience a heady jolt of adolescent freedom and a brutal introduction to both the sorrows of grown-up life and the weight of his people’s past.”

The Orchardist, Amanda Coplin. From the NY Times Review:  “‘His face was as pitted as the moon,’ Coplin writes of her late-19th-century protagonist, a well-meaning orchardist named Talmadge whose familial yearnings are eclipsed by early misfortune: the mysterious disappearance of his teenage sister. At the cusp of middle age, Talmadge forms surrogate kinships with Della, a young girl also haunted by the loss of a sister, and Caroline, the herbalist who attended his mother before her death.” This book struck me as about the dividing line between solitude and loneliness. It was a gripping story that I raced to finish, and afterwards found myself thinking about the characters and missing them.

The Boy Kings of Texas, Domingo Martinez. This is a nonfiction memoir that reads like it must be fiction because how could anyone’s childhood/adolescence/early adulthood be so fraught with disaster and still have the main character survive to write about it later? This book is funny in its tragedy as the author talks about living between two worlds in the border town of Brownsville, Texas and the emotional upheaval of his family-life. In my circle this book has been read by as many male as female readers and all have been captivated by the humor, the rage, and the story of what feels like growing up in another world.

Post-Graduation Resources: Shepardizing for Free

by Joshua Kahn

As the third year law students get ready to graduate, we here at the GSU law library feel it is our duty to provide a little methadone to help you shake your snack-fueled Westlaw/LexisNexis addiction.

Verifying cases with a citator is critically important, and probably the single most important of West and Lexis’s services.  You can do without a lot of their other features, but this one is a must-have.

So did you know you can use LexisNexis Academic, which includes a scaled down, but still completely functional version of Shepard’s, for free in the Law Library after you graduate?

To get to it, come to the law library (to use either our public computers or to plug into our wired network), then go to the law library homepage, click the databases tab, show the LexisNexis databases, click on LexisNexis Academic, select the “US Legal” tab on the left, and you’ll see a link to Shepard’s.

shepards01

shepards02

Check Out Our Study Aids

Study_AidsStarting April 23, you can check out all current study aids for 3 hours. Here are the details:

  • You’re limited to 2 study aids at a time.
  • You can take these books outside of the library.
  • If you don’t bring study aids back on time, you will not be able to check them out for the rest of the semester.
  • Older editions of study aids can still be checked out for a week, as usual.
  • Need a study aid for longer than 3 hours? You’re still welcome to use them in the library without checking them out.

We are running this as a trial just for the Spring 2013 exam period, but if this is a popular policy, we may implement it beyond this semester.

We would really like to know what you think! Stop by the Reference or Circulation desks to tell library staff or send us a chat or an email.