9.20.2006

Hein On-line

In addition to legal periodicals - HeinOnline includes many legal materials . Titles such as Federal Register, Legal Classics, Treatises and Agreements, U.S. Statutes At Large, U.S. Supreme Court are now part of the HeinOnline service. HeinOnline recently redesigned their home page. Now the site is very user friendly and easy to use.

Visit our home page www.lawlib.duq.edu and select 'Legal Research Tools' (left side of the screen) and then select HeinOnline (from drop down menu) to explore.


Law School Insert


LAW SCHOOLS -- SPECIAL INSERT--- IN THE NATIONAL LAW JOURNAL. ( September 14th issue)
To read the articles follow this link: http://www.law.com/jsp/nlj/law_schools.jsp


Pennsylvania Acts

If you have not yet used the full text of the Pennsylvania ACTS (legislation) are available from the Pennsylvania Legislative Reference Bureau. The Website is www.palrb.us Select, Pamphlet Laws (Left side of the page) from the home page and then select General Laws (by type) either by year (includes acts from 1970 to 2003) or 'View Recent Legislation' (includes acts from 2005 to date).


9.15.2006

TRANSCRIPTS OF ORAL ARGUMENTS FROM U.S. SUPREME COURT

Beginning with the October 2006 Term, the Court will make the transcripts of oral arguments available free to the public on its Web site on the same day an argument is heard by the Court.In the past, the transcripts had been posted on the Web site approximately two weeks after the close of an argument session. Previously, transcripts could be obtained sooner than they were posted on the Court's Web site by making arrangements in advance and purchasing them from the Court's contract reporting service.In the past, oral arguments had been transcribed off-site from audio recordings. The Court's current contract reporting service, Alderson Reporting Company, will now utilize the services of a court reporter in the Courtroom and high-speed technology to transcribe the oral arguments more quickly.Transcripts can be located by clicking on the "Oral Arguments" prompt on the home page of the Court's Web site and selecting "Argument Transcripts."Transcripts will be listed by case name and the date of oral argument. Transcripts are permanently archived beginning with the 2000 Term on the Court's Web site. Transcripts prior to the 2000 Term are maintained in the Court's Library. (JIll, Reference Librarian, U.S. Supreme Court)


Should Law Students' Use of Laptops Be Limited to Prevent Web-Surfing in Class?


Click on this link to view the article..



9.01.2006

Applications to top law schools decline. Third consecutive year of decreases.

National Law Journal
September 1, 2006

Click on this link to view the journal article.