Monthly Archives: January 2010

New Rumor

Post-Massachusetts rumor: I hear that Jay Leno will be taking over as President due to Obama's sinking ratings.

Posted in Politics: 2010 Election | 4 Comments

Large Hadron Collider Webcams

These are cool: Large Hadron Collider – CERN supercollider – webcams

Hadron Collider Webcams

We have two webcams online at the moment

* WebCam 2: Focus of this camera set is directly point at the inner core of the particle accelerator .
* Webcam 5: Great view of the car park taken from the generator room

These are unusual images, and I highly recommend them.

And don't forget to check the right margin of this blog for the RSS feed result from Has the Large Hadron Collider destroyed the earth yet?.

Posted in Completely Different | 1 Comment

FBI Wiretapping Scandal: Am I Reading this Right?

People who remember J. Edgar Hoover's FBI will not be surprised to read FBI broke law for years in phone record searches in today's Washington Post. The illegal searches were justified by fake emergencies. When an internal whistle blower started asking questions, they were justified by illegal (“blanket”) authorizations (the FBI used to accept that search authorizations, even retroactive emergency ones, must be justified in writing and particularized).

Nor will readers with any sense of history be surprised to learn that the FBI says there is nothing to worry about, move along:

FBI officials said they are confident that the safeguards enacted in 2007 have ended the problems.

However, readers who recall the Post when it was a newspaper will perhaps be a little startled that the Post keeps referring to the illegal requests and faked paperwork as “technical” violations of the law. Readers whose memory goes back to, oh, 1972, may also wonder how it is that this fact appears in the next-to-last paragraph of a fairly long story:

Among those whose phone records were searched improperly were journalists for The Washington Post and the New York Times, according to interviews with government officials.

And then there is this gem, which will startle all but the most harden cynic:

lawyers have now concluded there was no need for the after-the-fact approval process.

So, no paper trail next time! (Could this be the new procedures enacted in 2007?)

All that's left is the 5pm Friday night press release that an investigation has determined that no discipline is warranted … except maybe for the whistle blower.

Posted in Law: Privacy, National Security | 4 Comments

NYSBA Consideres ‘Strengths and Weaknesses of Women’ Lawyers

The New York State Bar Association was actually planning — really — to put on a panel discussion entitled Their point of View: Tips from the Other Side, described as follows: “A distinguished panel of gentleman will discuss the strengths and weaknesses of women.”

Yes, you've come a long way, baby.

(Howls of protest, threat of boycott, inspired cosmetic — but it seems not substantive —changes.)

Posted in Law: Practice | 3 Comments

1st DCA to Hear Oral Arguments at UM

Florida's First District Court of Appeals will hear Oral Arguments at the University of Miami Cosford Cinema this Thursday & Friday, January 21-22, 2010. Both sessions will begin at 9:00am and end by roughly 11 on Thursday and roughly 12 noon on Friday. This court has exclusive jurisdiction over Worker's Compensation Matters, and rumor hs it that this is what the cases will be about.

Great opportunity for law students to see the court and counsel in action.

Posted in U.Miami | Comments Off on 1st DCA to Hear Oral Arguments at UM

1L Grades

Good posts: Orin Kerr, Thought on First-Year Law School Grades and Lyrissa Lidsky, Emotional Distress and 1L Grades.

Our first year grades are due the 25th 28th and will be released soon thereafter all in a lump. This is a big change from previous practice where the grades were due on a rolling basis related to when the exam was given, and the size of the class. And they were released as they came in. This, we suspect, spread the pain for first years and interfered with second semester studiousness. Perhaps, we hope, people will have settled down into second semester routines and be better able to weather any jolts the grades may deliver.

As my exam was on the very last day of the exam period, and my section (IJ) has the most students, I get the worse deal here, but that's life.

Anyway, now that I've used up all the pills they gave me for my dental surgery, I'm back to grading. Which is a different sort of pain.

Posted in Law School | 4 Comments