How much do you know about the turkey? Take Aristotle’s Turkey Trivia Quiz and find out.
Happy Thanksgiving!
How much do you know about the turkey? Take Aristotle’s Turkey Trivia Quiz and find out.
Happy Thanksgiving!
We wanted to congratulate all of the winners in this year’s Halloween Info Hunt! Even Hurricane Sandy couldn’t scare off these (or the many other) intrepid researchers. We also wanted to thank ALL participants for joining in what we hope you all found to be a fun learning experience! At our November 8, 2012 drawing, we drew 13 winners from our famous Raffle Drum and offered them their choice of prizes. Hearty congratulations to:
Lola Ajifowobaje
Alena Bohacova
Vanessa Caicedo
Christopher Carrion
Gloria Chacon
Jordann Connaboy
Tenzin Dharlo
Aisha Elston-Wesley
Lansburg Jean-Pierre
Jamin Koo
Jonathan Reinstein
Kelly Rutkowski
Greg Sun
If your heart is already throbbing for the Mendik Library’s next Info Hunt, you’ll find satisfaction (and perhaps love) in early February when we announce our annual Valentine’s Day Find Love in the Library Info Hunt. Stay tuned!!
You may have missed Halloween but you definitely don’t want to miss this week’s prize drawing in the Haunted Halloween Info Hunt —Thursday November 8th at 5:45 p.m. We still have all of our candy to give out and then there are all the prizes . . . .
Click here for the details and an entry form if you need one (remember you can enter the drawing online or pick up an entry form at the Reference Desk). Entries will be accepted until 5:00 p.m. on November 8th.
We know that many of you have been affected by the recent hurricane. Returning to normal in difficult times is never easy. The entire library staff wishes you well. We are glad that we are back together and look forward to working with you to get back in gear. Our librarians are here and ready to help you. If you need help with passwords, databases, books or research projects, please let us know.
Note to 1Ls: We are working with the Legal Practice program on additional possibilities for completing the required workshops. You will be getting more information on that front soon.
And, just in case you needed a reminder: remember to vote tomorrow, Tuesday! Voting is a right. It is a privilege. And as lawyers, it is our duty!
For the sixth consecutive year the Mendik Library surveyed 1Ls during First Week library tours about their use of digital communication tools. Below is a quick summary of the results. You can see all the survey questions (and the responses) here.
In addition to telling us their favorite pizza topping (answer below), 411 members of the class of 2015/16 responded to questions about:
Some of the trends we have noted before are continuing – an increased use of social media, an increasing dominance of Google in web searching and beyond, and the increased popularity of Macs versus PCs. E-Book usage is advancing slowly, but don’t expect students to emerge as big followers of Blogs. And, the students you see with headphones or ear buds? Chances are good they are not listening to Podcasts.
* At the same time, a preference for mobile-based text messaging continued to rise, reaching a new high of 49%. This result is consistent with the findings of a Pew Internet & American Life Project 2011 study detailing that 73% of American adults who own cell phones (83% of Americans) send and receive text messages. The study further found that young adults between the ages of 18 and 24 averaged nearly 110 texts per day, translating to more than 3,200 per month. Though probably unrelated, the increased usage of E-mail was accompanied by a distinct drop-off in the use of BlackBerry Messaging, which fell from 6% in 2011 to just under 1% this year.
* Significantly, this class is also using their social networking sites of choice more than predecessor classes, with 52% claiming use more than once per day, the fifth straight year witnessing an increase.
* Among “Smartphones,” BlackBerry lost significant ground again this year (from 32% to 15%) to both the iPhone and the Android. That does not come as much of a surprise. An October 16, 2012 New York Times article titled “The BlackBerry as Black Sheep” noted that in the United States, BlackBerrys accounted for less than 5% of the Smartphone market, down from 50% three years ago.
* iPhone ownership saw a large uptick, from 37% in 2011 to 62% in 2012, while Android ownership remained steady at 21%.
* Ownership of an iPad or other Tablet device nearly doubled this year, from 16% to 30%. That result tracks the nationwide trend: according to a September 2012 Pew Research Center Internet & American Life Project report, 25% of adult Americans own a Tablet computer.
* Ownership of E-Book Readers, however, which now compete against Tablets for readers of E-Books, increased only marginally, from 14% to 16%. In 2010, the first year this question was posed, E-Book Reader ownership was at only 4%.
October 21 through 27, 2012 is Celebrate Pro Bono Week. Lawyers have a long tradition of providing pro bono services to Americans in need of legal assistance. Pro bono has been a part of our legal culture for a long time. Yet, despite our efforts, many of the civil legal needs of the poor are not being met and we must continue to expand our efforts in this area. Since 2009, the ABA Standing Committee on Pro Bono and Public Service has sponsored Celebrate Pro Bono Week and does so again this week. The Celebration is a coordinated national effort to meet the ever-growing needs of this country’s most vulnerable citizens by encouraging and supporting local efforts to expand the delivery of pro bono legal services, and by showcasing the great difference that pro bono lawyers make to the nation, its system of justice, its communities and, most of all, to the clients they serve. More information is available on the ABA’s website: http://www.probono.net/celebrateprobono/
“A legal system isn’t just or fair if it is not accessible to the most vulnerable in society,” William Robinson, former ABA President.
Happy Halloween from the Mendik Library! As a Halloween treat, here’s an easy opportunity to WIN prizes, including study aids, texts and other legal dictionaries, flash drives . . . and more.
Using Internet Explorer, click here to access the Haunted Halloween Hunt. Each slide includes one question (there are only 6) and easy, step-by-step instructions. Press enter to move on to each new question. Click here to access an answer sheet or pick up a copy at the Reference Desk. Either submit your completed answer sheet at the Reference Desk or e-mail it to reference@nyls.edu by 5:00 PM on Wednesday, October 31st. The drawing will take place outside the library entrance on October 31st at 5:45 PM. You need not be present to win, but an additional entry form will be added for each student who does attend!
Among the prizes winners will choose from are:
Professional Responsibility: A Student’s Guide |
Criminal Procedure and the Constitution |
Leading Constitutional Cases on Criminal Justice |
Winning On Appeal |
Skills & Values: Legal Negotiating |
Legal Writing: Examples and Explanations |
Foundations of Tort Law |
Questions & Answers: Wills, Trusts & Estates |
Questions & Answers: Business Associations |
Foundations of Labor and Employment Law |
Criminal Procedure II: From Bail to Jail |
Understanding Intellectual Property Law |
Barron’s Law Dictionary |
Highlighters |
Flash drives |
NYLS Guest Cards |
Halloween Treats |
Oral arguments are scheduled today (October 10) in Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, 631 F.2d 213 (5th Cir. 2011), cert. granted, 132 S. Ct. 1536 (Feb. 21, 2012). The case is a challenge to UT Austin’s consideration of race as a factor in undergraduate admissions and will be the first time the Court addresses affirmative action in higher education since Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306 (2003). The NYLS Racial Justice Project filed an amicus curiae brief in the case on behalf of the National Black Law Students Association. (See our previous post.)
The reference librarians of the Tarlton Law Library at the University of Texas have assembled a research guide for the case. The guide includes the text of selected court documents filed with the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Texas, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit, and the U.S. Supreme Court; news coverage and law review articles about the Fisher case; and some basic information on UT student body profiles and statistics since 2008. Tarlton’s librarians will continue to follow the case and update the guide as new articles are published.
The United States Supreme Court’s new term begins today (October 1, 2012), the first Monday in October. The 2012-2013 docket thus far includes at least one case of particular interest to members of the NYLS community: In Fisher v. University of Texas at Austin, involving a challenge to the University of Texas at Austin’s consideration of race as a factor in undergraduate admissions, New York Law School’s Racial Justice Project has filed an amicus brief on behalf of the National Black Law Student’s Association. (See this previous Mendik Matters post for additional details.) Fisher is set for argument on October 10, 2012.
Two great sources for learning about the new term are the ABA’s Preview of the United States Supreme Court Cases and the SCOTUS Blog. Preview is published eight times during the term, providing a concise analysis of cases granted review. The Preview website links to a list of the cases granted certiorari for the 2012-2013 term and provides links to the merits briefs filed in each case. The SCOTUS Blog provides comprehensive coverage and discussion of the Supreme Court and generally reports on every merits case before the Court at least three times: before argument; after argument; and after decision.
In preparing for the new term, you may also want to look back at earlier terms. At the end of each term, a number of journals and blogs provide a wealth of information on the types of cases heard by the Court, a breakdown of cases by major subject areas, analysis of key cases and opinions, and discussion of voting trends. For example, Preview devotes its last issue each year to a review of the newly completed term. The Harvard Law Review (also accessible via HeinOnline) devotes its November issue to coverage of the completed term, and the SCOTUS Blog provides a comprehensive end-of-term statistical analysis. End-of-term reviews are a great way to keep up with and learn more about the work of the nation’s highest court.
Take a break from the tedium of law study and enjoy the pleasures of punctuation!
September 24 is National Punctuation Day: “A celebration of the lowly comma, correctly used quotation marks, and other proper uses of periods, semicolons, and the ever-mysterious ellipsis.”
How do you celebrate such an event? Enter the Presidential Punctuation Challenge; entries must be one paragraph, a maximum of three sentences – this post isn’t – and use the thirteen punctuation marks (you may use a mark more than once) in this post [apostrophe, brackets, colon, comma, dash, exclamation point, hyphen, parentheses, period, question mark, quotation mark, semicolon . . . and don’t forget the ellipsis] to argue which punctuation mark should be the official punctuation mark of the President of the United States.