Monday, September 28, 2015

Service Hours Today, Monday, 9/28

Due to a staff illness, the McKusick Law Library will not be offering extended service hours to law students this evening.  The Law Library will close to the public at 5:00 p.m. and circulation and reference services will not be offered after 5:00 p.m.  Thank you for your understanding.

Friday, September 25, 2015

The "Happy Birthday" Song was Copyrighted . . .Until Now



On September 22, a federal judge in Los Angeles ruled that very specific piano arrangements of "Happy Birthday" is copyrighted, but the lyrics and melody are not. The copyright owners, Warner/Chappell, have been earning around $2 million on the song each year. 

The song (originally "Good Morning to All" with the melody later also being used for "Happy Birthday To You") was written for kindergartners by sisters Mildred and Patty Hill in 1893.

Because "Happy Birthday" had been under copyright, the public had to get creative with its celebratory singsong in movies, plays, and restaurants - hence the improvised birthday ditty you got embarrassed by at Chi-Chi's when you were 13.

Thursday, September 24, 2015

Free Legal Research CLE on October 2

The School of Law will be offering a free CLE session during Dakota Days, on Conducting Free, Low Cost, and Other Electronic Legal Research.  The session will be held Friday, October 2, 2015 2:00-4:00PM at the USD Law School, Vermillion, in Room 101.

The session is free to all interested in updating their legal research skills.

Registration requested but not required for attendance. Registration will help ensure you receive copies of the handouts to accompany the training. To register please forward your name, firm or practice affiliation, and email address to Sarah.Kammer@usd.edu or Darla.Jackson@usd.edu by September 28, 2015. Please include Dakota Days Legal Research CLE in the subject line.

Topics include: · Finding Free Case Law, Using Google · Finding Case Law and Related Secondary Materials using Fastcase and Hein Online · Free First Step Case Updating using Fastcase and Case Updating Using Lexis Academic at local universities · Federal Docket Searching Using Bloomberg Law · Finding Statutes, Codes (including Tribal Codes) and Legislative History Materials · Finding Free Administrative Materials and Local Municipal Codes

If you are a person with a disability and need a special accommodation to fully participate, please contact Disability Services 48 hours before the event at 605-677-6389.

Happy Punctuation Day!

Today, September 24, is National Punctuation Day!  To celebrate, the Law Library is featuring a display offering punctuation "profiles" of all your favorite punctuation marks.  The display also includes many of the Law Library's titles regarding citation, style, and legal writing, in general. 



Two especially NPD-worthy titles on display are:

Eats, Shoots & Leaves:  The Zero Tolerance Approach to Punctuation / by Lynne Truss

Comma Sense: A Fundamental Guide to Punctuation / by Richard Lederer and John Shore (Illustrations by James McLean)

Come stop by and check it out!  The Fundamental Legal Skills team and Law Review are also celebrating National Punctuation Day in the Student Commons with contests, prizes and treats. 


Monday, September 21, 2015

Hispanic Heritage Month


Hispanic Heritage Month is September 15 - October 15. This month long celebration is not picked arbitrarily - September 15th marks the anniversary of independence for Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, and Nicaragua, Mexico celebrates their independence on the 16th, and Chile celebrates theirs on the 18th. For a brief history on the proclamation of Hispanic Heritage Week/Month, and to view Executive and Legislative documents, see the Law Library of Congress' National Hispanic Heritage Month site.

The Library of Congress, National Archives and Records Administration, National Endowment for the Humanities, National Gallery of Art, National Park Service, Smithsonian Institution and United States Holocaust Memorial Museum have also teamed up to provide us with this special collection celebrating Hispanic Americans (I thought "The Red that Colored the World," was especially neat).

So, if you find you have a little time, change gears for a bit and learn yourself something cool about the heritage of some 50 million fellow Americans.






Thursday, September 17, 2015

Happy Constitution Day!







Meet the Class of 1787, the signers of the United States Constitution.

Also, there's this sweet digital collection on the United States Constitution, brought to you by the Library of Congress.

Tuesday, September 15, 2015

Ralph Nader Built a Law Museum, and there is a Corvair

Image credit: The American Museum of Tort Law
Dedicated to Tort Law, America has its first law museum. At first this "tort museum" idea seems like a flop of an idea, but, they have some interesting exhibit ideas and are working with Eisterhold Associates (the people who brought you "FOOD: How America Eats, at the National Museum of American History" and "Jurassic Park Discovery Center at Universal Islands of Adventure.") It will feature precedent-setting cases and artifacts from them and other landmark cases. Basically, a museum of disaster.

So, if you are in the Winsted, Connecticut area on September 26, you could attend the convocation ceremony.

 For more info, check out their website: tortmuseum.org, and their Twitter feed at twitter.com/TortMuseum.

Sunday, September 13, 2015

ProQuest News

Fellow bookworms,

A heads-up that the ProQuest EBL platform will be out of commission for about 3 hours (5 PM- 8 PM) on Tuesday, September 15, while they merge ebrary and EBL into a new back-end system.

Why are they combining ebrary and EBL? For the launch of Ebook Central! This union will allow access to all the same content, through an updated, streamlined, and more user-friendly interface. For more information on some of its new features, see also "ProQuest Ebook Central Enters Beta, Debuting New Features that Enhance User Productivity"

Thursday, September 3, 2015

HeinOnline News





This past year, HeinOnline has updated and added new features to their database. Early this year they introduced the ABA Law Library Collection Periodicals. Without getting too wordy about how awesome this is, it makes accessible both archives and new issues (keeping you current), exclusively through HeinOnline. Additionally, they've included 44 new titles that have never been open to non-members of specific American Bar Association sections. The cherry on top - they are full color PDFs. While this may not seem exciting initially, think about all those charts and graphs and infographics when not in color. It's pretty hard to glean anything from them when its just shades of grey. And it's not just my opinion, science says so too.

Only thing saving this graphic: itsocute!
Illus. by Frank Sommers
HeinOnline has also had an interface-lift (bad, "dad joke"). To help you get adjusted, they have provided a "Getting Started in HeinOnline Quick Reference Guide." Its cleaner, mobile friendly, has updated search options, and is easier to navigate.

Give it a whirl and see how you like it. Until next time, Happy Researching!

Wednesday, September 2, 2015

September in the Law Library: Constitution Day and Banned Books Week

Constitution Day is September 17 and Banned Books Week is September 27 through October 3.  Both present a great opportunity to highlight our resources on free speech and the First Amendment. On our first floor display, in addition to selected reads brought to you by HeinOnline, we also have a handpicked assortment of books centered around human rights, free speech, and the First Amendment. "Freedom From Speech" by Greg Lukianoff, "Finding Jefferson" by Alan Dershowitz, and "Saving Our Children from the First Amendment" by Kevin Saunders, are just a few of the titles for you to peruse and/or borrow.

Tuesday, September 1, 2015

Labor Day Weekend Hours

The McKusick Law Library will be closed to the public on Monday, September 7 for the Labor Day Holiday.  There will not be any Circulation/Reference service hours to USD law students on Sunday, September 6 or Monday, September 7.  Law students will continue to have 24/7 access to the Law Library throughout the holiday weekend using their University ID cards.

The Law Library will reopen to the public on Tuesday, September 8 at 7:45 a.m.