There are lots of software tools available to capture a “picture” of your computer screen. Screenshots are useful for saving images in order to paste them into documents. My favorite is Snippy. It’s a small executable file that resides in your taskbar. Snippy is easy to use and best of all, it’s FREE!
Screenshot Software
October 16th, 2009 by cciambelLeadership Library Database Helpful for Job Searches
September 30th, 2009 by lreeves4The law library recently acquired the Leadership Library database, which is the online verison of the popular Yellow Books. The Leadership Library is a vast directory including contact information for people in leadership positions in all three branches of government at the federal, state, and local levels. The Leadership Library also includes contact information for people in leadership positions in corporations, finance, media, associations, non-profits, law firms, and government and foreign affairs offices. Online access provides searchability that is unavailable in the print format. For example, the online Leadership Library will allow you to search for contacts within a particular agency who are graduates of GMU Law. To access the Leadership Library database, go to the library’s home page and select “Law-Related Databases”: http://www.law.gmu.edu/library/catalog. Once you graduate, you will be able to use the database from public computer terminals in the law library and the career services office. Feel free to stop by the reference desk in the library for a demonstration.
Welcome (Or Welcome Back) to the GMU Law Library!
August 26th, 2009 by lreeves4Well, it’s that time of year again. Whether you are just starting law school, or returning from your summer break, we are very excited to have you join us here in the library! If you are new to the Washington, D.C. area, we hope you are settling in and making new friends. This is a great place to call home, if only for a few years. If you are returning from the summer break, we hope that you have had interesting work opportunities, and maybe even found a little time for the beach. Whatever your path, we want to wish you much success in the coming school year. If there is anything the library can do to support you in this year’s endeavors, please don’t hesitate to let us know. A directory of library staff is available on our web site for your convenience (http://www.law.gmu.edu/library/staff). If you would prefer, you may also leave a comment in our electronic suggestion box (http://www.law.gmu.edu/library/suggestions).
Manipulating PDF Documents - Without Using Adobe Acrobat
August 18th, 2009 by cciambelThere are several free alternatives to Adobe Acrobat that will let you do almost anything to a PDF document.
PDF-XCHANGE VIEWER software allows you to highlight text as you read. It also lets you annotate documents with notes.
PDFTextOnline works within your browser to extract text from PDF documents, enabling you to copy and paste them.
For more information on working with PDF documents, see the Adobe PDF Guide from Digital Inspiration.
The Library Will Be Closed This Weekend
July 29th, 2009 by cciambelDue to a scheduled power outage, the library will close at 5pm on Friday, July 31 and will reopen on Monday, August 3 at 10am. No one will be admitted to Hazel Hall during this time.
Complete information on the library’s hours is available on our web site.
The CRS Report on Judge Sotomayor
July 16th, 2009 by cciambelThe Congressional Research Service has issued a report analyzing the opinions of Supreme Court nominee Sonia Sotomayor. CRS reports are an excellent research source, but many researchers are not familiar with them. CRS has “nationally recognized experts in a range of issues and disciplines, including law, economics, foreign affairs, public administration, the information, social, political sciences, natural sciences.” (About the Congressional Research Service.)
Congress does not release these reports to the Government Printing Office for public distribution (as they do for other Congressional publications). Because the reports are government documents, several private entities have posted them on web sites or created databases for them.
George Mason Law professors and students can find them on the LexisNexis Congressional database, which contains the all CRS reports published since 1916. If you are not on campus, follow the directions for remote access to sign on. Then click on the “advanced search” tab.
For assistance with CRS reports, or any other research, please contact the Reference Desk at 703-993-8076.
Lexis Announces Free Access for Some 2009 Grads
May 12th, 2009 by cciambelLexis has created the ASPIRE Program (Associates Serving Public Interests Research) for 2009 graduates who work in public service during their employment deferral period. Details are available on their website.
Spotlight on HeinOnline
May 7th, 2009 by lreeves4HeinOnline has always been an excellent resource for law journal articles, and over the past few years has expanded its digital library to include a wide array of other secondary legal materials as well as primary domestic and international legal resources. William S. Hein & Co., based in Buffalo and in business for the past 80 years, was already the world’s largest distributor of legal journals. With HeinOnline, they capitalized on that market share by creating a digital archive of virtually every major legal journal in publication. Two things make HeinOnline unique: 1) HeinOnline’s law journal database is an historical archive, so coverage of most journals begins with the very first volume, as opposed to LexisNexis and Westlaw, which only cover the last 20 years or so, and 2) HeinOnline scans the articles directly from the journals in PDF, so that the end-user is looking at an exact copy of the article, with pagination intact. For this reason, most academic law journals around the country will accept a HeinOnline PDF for cite-checking purposes.
In addition to the law journal database, HeinOnline has a comprehensive database of federal primary materials including the Federal Register and Code of Federal Regulations, the Statutes at Large and the United States Code, Supreme Court Decisions, Attorney General Opinions, as well as Agency documents and decisions. HeinOnline also has the session laws of all 50 states. HeinOnline’s international content includes the United Nations Law Collection and the Treaties and International Agreements Library. Foreign materials include the English and Israel Law Reports. Students who compete in moot court will be glad to know that HeinOnline has a comprehensive library of moot court competititons including Jessup International, dating back to 1960. And, HeinOnline’s secondary legal materials include a database of more than 1,300 classic legal treatises on a wide range of topics. HeinOnline can be accessed throught the law library’s database portal, http://www.law.gmu.edu/library/catalog, and our reference librarians will be happy to show you how this or any of our databases can help you find the legal information you need.
Monitor State and Federal Legal News With BNA Online
April 30th, 2009 by lreeves4The law library has renewed its subscription to the Bureau of National Affairs (BNA) database. BNA specializes in reporting federal and state government news, and claims to have “more credentialed reporters covering official Washington than the Washington Post, New York Times, and Wall Street Journal combined.” This makes BNA an excellent resource for legislative tracking. BNA is also a good resource for monitoring federal and state court decisions, as well as regulatory developments. You may be familiar with one of BNA’s most popular publication, U.S. Law Week, which tracks major legislation and important decisions and regulatory developments from federal and state government as well as courts across the country. The BNA–ALL Law School Package purchased by the law library includes over 300 reports on a range of subjects including Antitrust, Banking, Bankruptcy, Corporate, Employment and Labor, Environment, Ethics, Health Care, Homeland Security, Intellectual Property, International, Litigation, Securities, Tax, and Trade and Commerce. The Law School Package also includes an e-mail update feature that will allow you to set up monitoring and notification of developments in a particular jurisdiction and area of the law. The BNA Libraries database may be accessed from the law school’s database portal at http://www.law.gmu.edu/library/catalog. As always, please feel free to ask a reference librarian for assistance with this or any resource the law library makes available to you.
Library Usage Survey Results
April 29th, 2009 by dkeeneDuring the last two weeks of March, law library staff conducted a user survey to determine who is using the library and why. A total of 687 library users completed a survey. Not surprisingly, the vast majority of those who responded were law students (81%). The rest of the users consisted of other GMU students (6%), members of the general public (6%), attorneys (4%), faculty (1%) and others (2%).
The survey asked users to select their purpose(s) for visiting the library. The overwhelming majority of law students (480 out of 554) responded that they were using the library to study or prepare for classes. An equally large number of law students (466) indicated that they were going to use electronic resources. The most popular were Westlaw (240), Lexis (150), Loislaw (28) and the Library Catalog (29). A much smaller number of students indicated that they planned to use the print collection (109). The most frequently used print materials were cases and digests, followed by law journals, treatises, and statutes. Law students selected a number of other purposes for using the library including use of their laptops (217), use of the computer labs (130), photocopying (28) and reference assistance (18).
Usage by other GMU students followed a similar pattern with study coming in first followed by use of the print collection, computer labs, laptops, and reference help. Attorneys and other public patrons indicated that they were using the library primarily for the print collection, but some also planned to use photocopy services and reference. A number of public patrons indicated that they were using the library primarily for study.
