…no one connects that excitement with life in libraries and librarians and researchers. I sometimes wonder why, but then forget about it because I have some legal research mysteries of…
Search Results for: label/Law libraries
MetaCrap and …
I happen to be reading Everything is Miscellaneous in spare moments (which is a not-inappropriate way to read such a book). Today I came upon this at…
Keeping Up With Current Legal Literature
In my previous life, in academic law libraries, it was easy to keep up with current law journals, newspapers, and newsletters. Print and online subscriptions came right to my…
The “Determinator” Copyright Renewal Database
Posted at Library Journal: “The Stanford University Libraries and Academic Information Resources (SULAIR) has launched the “Determinator” Copyright Renewal Database , an online resource to enable users to…
Oregon Statutes of Limitations Handbook Correction
…7, 2006). The case has bearing upon, inter alia, ORS 12.155 and 174.100(5). Thanks to the Oregon Council of County Law Libraries (OCCLL) who alerted us to this update….
Constitutional Right to Check Out Library Books?
…Court this week will consider a case that could have major implications for the state’s 388 public libraries…. It pits a resident in Bloomfield Hills — one of the country’s…
Capiche the Niche?
…library mind you, but the list is astonishingly long. There are lots of reasons for this. The driving one for a lot of law libraries is price inflation,…
Flags: How to Fly One and How to Design One
…(gotta love that First Amendment). But librarians don’t enforce rules (except in our own libraries). We just show people how to find them. I always thought that it might be…
Oregon 2009 Legislative Roundups
The 2009 Oregon legislative session compilations are showing up in libraries and online (but don’t expect the 2009 ORS for a 2-3 months yet. Codification…
Towing Complaint? Speak Out Now.
Aggrieved car owners whose cars have been towed are frequent visitors to our law library and to other public libraries. “What can I do?” they ask. The answer is…
Oregon Legal Research Blog

