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You might not realize it but it’s Census Time Again. Wowsers! 2010, here we come. None of us can avoid the march of time, so don’t be mean to your elders or your youngers (so to speak). You too will one day be OLD (ha ha ha).

Before I forget what I was talking about (!), here’s the news on the Scam Alert and the Census Scam:

Use Twitter to track Oregon Scam Alerts, which links to this 10/14/09 news release:

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Law school in 30 seconds? Not quite, but close!

Visit the Oregon State Bar’s public website for some fun lessons in the law. They answer questions like these and have lots of other useful information:

1) If I co-sign for my son to buy a car, could I wind up paying for it?

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The Southern California Association of Law Libraries’ (SCALL) Public Access to Legal Information Committee (PALI) has published the fifth edition of:

Locating the Law: A Handbook for Non-Law Librarians (2009).

Thank the California law librarians for this – it represents a lot of extra work for some very busy people!

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Small businesses in Oregon and Washington have a lot of legal resources from which to draw information and advice. I’ve blogged about Small Business Law before and recently have been watching this latest entry into the field:

Northwest Small Business Law Blog: Links, news articles, and original content regarding small business law in Oregon and Washington

Give them a try. They have links to lots of small business legal resources.

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I posted many years ago on this subject, more a note for myself than for readers, but I have had reason lately to update that post for all of us, with these new resources:

1) The 2009 Family Law OSB CLE also has a couple of chapters on the subject.

2) Bankruptcy and Domestic Relations Manual, by Hon. William Houston Brown, 2008-09 edition, Thomson-West Bankruptcy Series

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Bob Ambrogi recently posted this to his website: Casemaker Fights Back Over Loss in Oregon (posted Thursday, October 01, 2009):

“… I described the two as “in a head-to-head competition to win the loyalty of America’s lawyers.” That competition reached a critical juncture last month when the Oregon State Bar Association announced it was switching from Casemaker to Fastcase. That switch took effect today.

Today, Casemaker shot back, doing something it has never done before….”
(read full post)

The Law Librarian and Non-Attorney Legal Researcher Perspective:

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With apologies to the incomparable Edwin Newman (who first created Kid Pro Quo, the boxer who gave as good as he got, in his book, “Sunday Punch”) and to Consequential Strangers authors (Melinda Bau and Karen Fingerman), who would rightly raise eyebrows at the “most powerful” description of this list.

That said, it was impossible to resist the lure of the Kids Pro Quo list: The 50 Most Powerful People in D.C

(Thank you to the Law Librarian Blog for the link.)

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1) Do you know what your Condo Management Association is up to?

2) Maybe you are Condo Management and want to know what you should be doing.

3) Maybe you’re thinking about buying a condo and want to hear about HOA rights and responsibilities.

Smart people love Forums and Meetings and Seminars! Here is a condo training opportunity just for you:

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An idea whose time has come, maybe, soon:

Law.Gov: A Proposed Registry and Repository of All Primary Legal Materials of the United States

PACER, CRS, eCourt, eFiling, caselaw, statutes, superseded laws, dockets, state, federal, international, etc., etc., etc.? One can dream.

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