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Sara Sampson Moving to Georgetown

Sara Sampson, reference librarian at the Moritz Library, is leaving us to take the Head of Reference position at the Georgetown Law Library . We will greatly miss her knowledge, experience and friendship, but we are happy for the exciting opportunities Sara's new position will provide for her. Fortunately, in today's modern world, she will remain only an e-mail or a phone call away. Good luck, Sara. ...but the Blog must go on.

Foie Gras Litigation

The City of Chicago has recently banned city restaurants from selling foie gras, the fattened liver of ducks or geese. The ban is the result of complaints that the production of foie gras is not humane. The Wall Street Journal's Law Blog reports that litigation has ensued with the Illinois Restaurant Association and Allen’s New American CafĂ©, a Chicago restaurant, filing a complaint asserting that the Chicago ban is illegal. The claim, which municipal lawyers will be familiar with, is that the state constitution only permits municipalities to legislate regarding local problems and not activities that are more properly dealt with by the state. Stay tuned.

Advice for 1-Ls

The best advice that I can give to 1-Ls about law school, very similar to Professor Brannon Denning's advice , is to treat your first year of law school like a job (rather than the third semester of your senior year). Plan on spending your days doing school work, but save time in the evenings and the weekend to spend with family and friends. Make productive use of the gaps in your class schedule, work hard, then go home and relax. There is no shortage of advice for incoming law students. 1-Ls should check out the advice links on the Heafey Headnotes blog and on CALI's PreLaw Blog . There is nothing like your first year of law school. It's new, exciting, stimulating, challenging - it's the best of times (and sometimes the worst of times). Try to enjoy it; you'll only do it once. Thanks to ZiefBrief and Law Dawg Blawg for the good information.

How to Read a Judicial Opinion

Orin Kerr, associate professor of law at George Washington University Law School, has written an essay, How to Read a Judicial Opinion: A Guide for New Law Students . The essay explains "what judicial opinions are, how they are structured, and what you should look for when you read them." From Law Dawg Blawg .