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Delaware Campus: New Spaces in the Library!

September 13th, 2007 Comments off

We hope everyone has noticed the recent changes to the Delaware Campus Law Library.

The PC Lab has moved across
Main Street and is now located on the 1st floor of the library. A new
entrance to the library has been added on the 1st floor to provide
easier access to this space. The new copiers located in the PC Lab are
configured to handle print jobs from the PC Lab workstations.

Additional Study Rooms added.
The reconfiguration of the 1st floor has allowed the edition of a new
study room on the first floor, just past the computer workstations.
Also a new study room has been added to the 3rd floor of the library
(it was formerly a Law Review Workroom.)

New Classroom added to the 3rd floor.
A new conference / classroom has been added to the third floor of the
library. This room will be named the Marshall- Dennehey Room (you may
see it referred to as the ìMD Roomî.)

Due to the meetings and classes being scheduled in the Marshall-
Dennehey Room on the 3rd floor, you may occasionally notice more noise
than previous semesters on this former ìquiet floorî. You will still
find many quiet places to study in the library including the back areas
of the 1st and 2nd floors- we apologize if this causes any
inconvenience.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Educating Lawyers

September 12th, 2007 Comments off

William M. Sullivan, et al. Educating Lawyers: Preparation for the Profession of Law. San Francisco, Jossey-Bass, 2007. KF272 .E38 2007

Categories: new books Tags:

Busy Person’s Guide To Current Awareness

August 22nd, 2007 Comments off

Is there a law review or non-legal journal you would love to read but
never remember to look for the new issues?  What about a topic
that you would like to keep up with?  

There are a multitude of online services that are willing and eager to
fill this need for Widener law school faculty and students. 
Westlaw and Lexis have alert services that provide regular updates for
almost all of the information they cover.  

The Bureau of National Affairs (BNA) offers e-mail delivery of their many newsletters.
 http://www.law.widener.edu/Law-Library/new/research/legal_databases_bna.shtml

Commerce Clearing House (CCH) offers newsletter sign-ups on its web
sites dealing with banking, securities and business law, health and
human resources law, and taxation.
http://www.law.widener.edu/Law-Library/new/research/legal_databases.shtml

Non-legal journals and major newspapers can be tapped for alerts using
databases such as Ebscohost, ProQuest or JStor.  These services
are located on the database page on the Widener Law Library web site.

For help defining an alert or getting it set up, contact a Reference librarian.  You will be glad you did.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Patriots and Cosmopolitans

August 10th, 2007 Comments off

John Fabian Witt. Patriots and Cosmopolitans: Hidden Histories of American Law. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 2007. KF353 .W58 2007

From the publisher:  Ranging widely from the founding era to Reconstruction, from the making of the modern state to its post-New Deal limits, John Fabian Witt illuminates the legal and constitutional foundations of American nationhood through the little-known stories of five patriots and critics. He shows how law and constitutionalism have powerfully shaped and been shaped by the experience of nationhood at key moments in American history.

Founding Father James Wilson’s star-crossed life is testament to the capacity of American nationhood to capture the imagination of those who have lived within its orbit. For South Carolina freedman Elias Hill, the nineteenth-century saga of black citizenship in the United States gave way to a quest for a black nationhood of his own on the West African coast. Greenwich Village radical Crystal Eastman became one of the most articulate critics of American nationhood, advocating world federation and other forms of supranational government and establishing the modern American civil liberties movement. By contrast, the self-conscious patriotism of Dean Roscoe Pound of Harvard Law School and trial lawyer Melvin Belli aimed to stave off what Pound and Belli saw as the dangerous growth of a foreign administrative state.

Categories: new books Tags:

Religious Freedom and the Constitution

August 10th, 2007 Comments off

Christopher L. Eisgruber, Lawrence G. Sager. Religious Freedom and the Constitution. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press, 2007. KF4783 .E355 2007

From the publisher:  Religion has become a charged token in a politics of division. In disputes about faith-based social services, public money for religious schools, the Pledge of Allegiance, Ten Commandments monuments, the theory of evolution, and many other topics, angry contestation threatens to displace America’s historic commitment to religious freedom. Part of the problem, the authors argue, is that constitutional analysis of religious freedom has been hobbled by the idea of “a wall of separation” between church and state. That metaphor has been understood to demand that religion be treated far better than other concerns in some contexts, and far worse in others. Sometimes it seems to insist on both contrary forms of treatment simultaneously. Missing has been concern for the fair and equal treatment of religion. In response, the authors offer an understanding of religious freedom called Equal Liberty.

Categories: new books Tags:

DE Campus: New Copiers and New Recycling Bins

June 26th, 2007 Comments off

The Campus Services Department has been busy this week preparing for
Xerox to install new photocopiers around campus. The library copiers
will be replaced on Tuesday, June 26th. Our hope is that theses new
copiers will eliminate the constant paper jamming problems of the past.
As always, please let a library staff member know if you have trouble
with the copiers in the library- if we can’t fix the problem we will
call someone who can.

While you are checking out the new copiers, take a moment to notice the
new blue recycling bins located in each copy room as well as the CALR
Lab (room 274 in the library where the Westlaw and Lexis printers are
located.) These recycling containers are for paper only. Please help us
with this recycling effort by discarding unwanted paper in the blue
containers instead of the normal trashcans.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Summer Reading

May 22nd, 2007 Comments off

Have some free time this summer?  Here are some light summer reading suggestions. Most of these books aren’t available at Widener Law Library but you should be able to find them at your local public library or bookstore.

Jeremy Blachman. Anonymous Lawyer.

Publishers Weekly review:  Blachman’s side-achingly funny debut, derived from his popular blog of the title, is written in the candid, sanctimonious voice of Anonymous Lawyer, an ill-humored, ill-tempered hiring partner at a prestigious New York firm. Anonymous Lawyer is an 18-year man whose compulsion to blog is almost as strong as his desire for the firm’s chairmanship. When he’s not facing off with his nemesis, The Jerk, in the race for the chair, he takes solace in degrading his summer interns and hapless associates for his quickly developing cult of readers (who e-mail with guesses at his identity).

Reed Arvin. Blood of Angels.

Publishers Weekly review:  Thomas Dennehy, assistant DA of Davidson County, Tenn., is about to become famous. Unless he can figure a way out of it, he’ll be certified as the first lawyer in the country to have sent the wrong man to the death chamber. As if that isn’t enough, he must also prosecute a charismatic member of the local Sudanese community, Moses Bol, accused of killing a prostitute, in a trial that threatens to engulf Nashville in a full-scale race riot. Dennehy is tough, in court and out, and has plenty of interesting personal problems-primarily an ex-wife for whom he has conflicting feelings and an 11-year-old daughter he adores. He’s a highly sympathetic figure, as are Arvin’s other characters-except the bad guy who’s harboring a deadly grudge and a diabolical plan that confounds both Dennehy and the police. While trying to sort through his problems, Dennehy falls for an unlikely lady, Fiona Towns, a local minister and Moses Bol’s alibi. Perhaps this material isn’t quite as original as Arvin’s debut, The Last Goodbye, but the author is among the top handful of legal thriller writers working today, and this is another winner that thriller, mystery and general fiction readers alike will relish.

Shiya Ribowsky and Tom Shachtman.  Dead Center: Behind the Scenes at the World’s Largest Medical Examiner’s Office. RA1025.R53 A3 2006

Review: Dead Center is an intimate and moving account of life in the ME’s office and how a nice Jewish boy wound up in a place many think of as ghoulish. The book opens on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, but it is about more than that fateful day. It explains how deaths are really investigated in New York City, rather than the somewhat-glorified pictures of homicide investigations often painted by crime shows and movies.

Richard North Patterson. Exile.

Library Journal review: Patterson (Conviction) pens a big legal thriller that is light on suspense but compelling nonetheless. David Wolfe, a successful Jewish lawyer with political ambitions, had a clandestine affair with Arab activist Hana Arif while in law school, but Hana left him to enter an arranged marriage. Thirteen years later, Hana is vacationing in San Francisco with her family when the visiting Israeli prime minister is assassinated by a suicide bomber, which brings a new level of terrorism to the United States. Hana stands accused as the mastermind of the murder and asks David to represent her, dramatically disrupting both their lives. While David isn’t entirely sure he believes his former lover is innocent, he finds many inconsistencies in the evidence against her. When it begins to appear that Hana is being framed, he goes to Israel in search of the truth. The stories of the Israelis and Arabs with whom David meets are unforgettable, but the central plot line and main characters are a bit thin. Still, Patterson delves evenhandedly into both sides of the Arab-Israeli conflict, making this a fascinating and timely read.

William Martin.  The Lost Constitution

Publishers Weekly review: A rare, annotated draft of the U.S. Constitution is at the heart of Martin’s entertaining third novel to feature antiquarian book dealer Peter Fallon. As in Harvard Yard (2003), Martin tells two stories. The first chronicles the loss and recovery of the document at the time of the constitutional convention, where young Will Pike attends Massachusetts delegate Rufus King, and its passing through generations of the Pike family to the present. The second traces Fallon’s search against deadly competition to find the draft. Throughout, Martin makes clear that people have always tried to use the Constitution for their own purposes, including right-wing Christian fanatics, survivalist gun nuts, liberal gun-banners and greedy entrepreneurs now seeking the lost draft. The Pike family motto: “In America, we get up in the morning, we go to work, and we solve our problems” serves as a unifying theme, and Martin also makes clear that the Constitutionódrafts and allówas intended as a unifying agent. This is a good mystery, a better examination of constitutional issues and a superb paean to New England, its people, natural beauty and resources.

Nick Laird. Utterly Monkey

Publishers Weekly review: Lairdópoet, former lawyer and husband of Zadie Smithódebuts, lad-lit style, with this sometimes entertaining story of childhood friends whose paths diverged radically and then reconverged. Danny Williams is a well-paid (if deeply unenthusiastic) lawyer at a prestigious London firm; Geordie Wilson, his boyhood chum from Northern Ireland, is “officially an unemployed labourer” who’s just showed up on Danny’s doorstep desperate for a place to stay. Geordie’s in trouble with the Ulster Unionists back home, primarily because he has a sack full of their cash; Danny’s been told he needs to go back to Northern Ireland to deal with a corporate takeover. Geordie joins forces with Danny, more out of idle curiosity than a sense of urgency (though the Unionists are planning something nasty). Laird’s writing is clear and amusing, and both his protagonists are likable. But their aimlessness impedes the building of any narrative momentum, and the book’s climactic scene is as rushed as it is contrived. The novel is well intentioned, clever and occasionally quirkyóbut the whole feels like less than the sum of its parts.

Martha Kimes.  Ivy Briefs: A privileged and Confidential Law School Story.

Publishers Weekly review:  First time author Kimes is entertaining and funny in recounting her
three years at one of the country’s premier law schools. A smart young
woman with a good, but not always engaged, sense of perspective, Kimes
jumps from the University of Wisconsin to Columbia Law School on the
wings of a spectacular showing on the LSATs. Once there, she faces the
predictable sadistic professor, hypercompetitive fellow students and,
of course, rampant elitism. Kimes is happy to treat with an equal
measure of humor the highly stylized courting dance between summer law
clerks and mega law firms, as well as the foreboding horrors of the bar
exam. Though some stories seem hyperbolic and re-created conversations
can be suspiciously pat, Kimes captures with accuracy the gestalt of
the law school experience. Kimes did get a job at what she calls
“Lavish Law Firm.” But she eventually left to join the Make-a-Wish
Foundation, which may be her final comment on the world of big-time
law. The self-deprecating wit, catty observations and healthy sense of
the absurd with which Kimes describes her approach-avoidance reactions
to the world of law school raise the book above the ordinary.

Douglas Litowitz.  The Destruction of Young Lawyers: Beyond One L. KF298 .L58 2006

Amazon review: Doug Litowitz’s book on young lawyers is a must read for lawyers, law professors, law students, and potential law students. Although Litowitz occasionally overstates a point–for example, I disagree that all, or most, law professors were unsuccessful lawyers and that all, or most, law professors employ the Socratic method to demoralize students–authors are permitted poetic license if the general message they are trying to convey is important and true. Litowitz’s message is both of these things: the systems through which we train and employ young lawyers is broken and needs to be fixed. Litowitz’s book is also extremely well-written, and holds the reader’s attention from start to finish. I recommend it unreservedly and I commend Litowitz for his brave and profound book.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Widener Law Graduate wins Common Pleas Judicial Primary

May 18th, 2007 Comments off

Widener Law graduate, Jennifer W. Levy-Tatum (’97), won the democratic
primary for Judge of the Court of Common Pleas, 15th Judicial District
(Chester County). She will face attorney David F. Bortner in November’s
election. More information can be found here. Official poll results can be viewed here.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Writing Essay Exams to Succeed

May 1st, 2007 Comments off

John C. Dernbach. Writing Essay Exams to Succeed (Not Just to Survive). New York, Aspen Publishers, 2007. KF283 .D47 2007

This book by Widener professor John Dernbach was featured a few months ago.  Now that it is exam time you might want to take another look at it. The Delaware campus library’s copies are in the open reserve room near the library entrance.

Categories: new books Tags:

CALI Lessons Offer Free Exam Preparation Help

April 30th, 2007 Comments off

With finals time here, don’t forget that CALI lessons are a free way to help you prepare.

If
you’re unfamiliar, CALI lessons are interactive, computer-based
tutorials provided by the non-profit Center for Computer-Assisted Legal
Instruction (www.cali.org).
There are over 600 CALI lessons available in 32 different legal subject
areas. The lessons, written by law faculty/librarians, are free to all
law students at our school because our law school is a CALI member.

If you are registering a free account at cali.org for the first time, note that you must use our school’s authorization code to create a new account on www.cali.org. To get the authorization code, call the reference desk at 477-2114 or email jslindenmuth@widener.edu or IM widenerlawlib.

We also still have some CALI CDs for those without internet access.  Stop by the reference desk to pick one up while supplies last.

Good luck with finals!

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Stress Management for Lawyers

April 18th, 2007 Comments off

Amiram Elwork. Stress Management for Lawyers: How to Increase Personal & Professional Satisfaction in the Law. North Wales, Pa., Vorkell Group, 2007. KF300 .E59 2007

From the publisher: This is a stress management book written specifically for lawyers. When you practice law, stress comes with the territory. Such stressors as time pressures, competition and conflict can rob you of a satisfying career and fulfilling personal life. However, you don’t have to suffer in silence. You can take action!

Amiram Elwork is the Director of Widener’s Law-Psychology (J.D.-Psy.D.) graduate program.

Categories: new books Tags:

The Declaration of Independence

April 18th, 2007 Comments off

David Armitage. The Declaration of Independence: A Global History. Cambridge, Mass., Harvard University Press, 2007. E221 .A735 2007

Publisher’s Weekly review:  Harvard history professor Armitage (Greater Britain, 1516-1776: Essays in Atlantic History) examines how America’s Declaration of Independence influenced the revolutionary struggles of people around the world. Armitage begins by teasing out the world as the Declaration imagined it: the international community consisted of “peoples linked by both benign and malign forms of commerce,” as well as divided by warfare and “threatened by outlaw powers.” He then describes how the world reacted to America’s Declaration: it almost immediately sparked debate about the basis on which a state was legitimate. Finally, Armitage traces the ripple effects of the Declaration: today half the world’s countries have such declarations. The author compares and contrasts these other documents with the American one, showing how other nascent nations sometimes drew on America’s language and ideas, such as a statement of grievances. Armitage suggests that this succession of declarations constitutes “a major transition in world history”: what was once a world of empires has become a world of sovereign states. This core argument is fascinating and significant, though lengthy appendixes, including several declarations, will interest primarily scholars. (Jan.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Categories: new books Tags:

National Library Week Contest – Delaware Campus – Win Bookstore Gift Certificates! – Free M&Ms

April 16th, 2007 Comments off

This week (April 15th through 21st) is National Library Week.  Celebrate at the library by completing our Library Research Quiz. Everyone who completes the quiz will receive a fun size bag of M&Ms!

First and second place winners will be chosen from all correct entries to receive a Widener bookstore gift certificate.

First prize: $30 gift certificate
Second prize: $20 gift certificate

Quizzes are available at the reference desk in the library.  Quizzes must be submitted to a reference librarian during regular reference hours. Deadline for entries is 5:00 Saturday, April 21st.

The contest is open to all Delaware campus Widener Law School students, faculty and non-library staff.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Special Master rules in favor of Delaware

April 13th, 2007 Comments off

A Special Master appointed by the Supreme Court of the United States
has issued a report in favor of the State of Delaware in a dispute with
the State of New Jersey. In the suit, New Jersey claimed to have the
right to allow the company BP to build a Liquified Natural Gas (LNG)
distribution plant on the New Jersey side of the Delaware river. The
problem was that Delaware has retained sovereignty of the entire river
up to the low tide mark on the New Jersey side as it was deeded by
William Penn. The ruling and appendices are available (for the time being) at delawareonline.com<span style=”text-decoration: underline;”></span>
It should also be posted to the U.S. Supreme Courts website in the next few days here. The case State of New Jersey v. State of Delaware is still subject to review by the Supreme Court.

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags:

Spring Holiday Hours (Delaware Campus Library)

March 29th, 2007 Comments off

Spring Holiday Hours (Delaware Campus Library)
Thursday, April 5th…………..8am-10pm
Fri-Sat, April 6-7……………….9am-5pm
Sunday, April 8th…………….Noon-10pm

Categories: LIC Delaware Campus News Tags: