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April 2008 Archives

April 1, 2008

Nashville Entertainment Lawyer speaks

sullivan.jpgAttorney Robert Sullivan will be speaking on Tuesday April 1 from 6:00pm to 7:00pm in Room 200.  Mr. Sullivan is joining us from Nashville, TN- the birthplace of country music and one of the most exciting places to practice entertainment law. 

Robert Sullivan, a partner at Loeb & Loeb LLP in Nashville, Tennessee, focuses his practice on entertainment transactions primarily in the music field, as well as litigation and mediation in entertainment and intellectual property areas. He represents major recording artists, songwriters, publishing companies, and record companies.

Mr. Sullivan also has depth of knowledge in employment law and general business litigation. In recent years, he has represented employers in disputes involving contracts, covenants not to compete, executive compensation, and sexual harassment.

He has been named Best Lawyer in Entertainment Law by "The Best Lawyers in America" (1995 - 2008). 

BLSA Elects New Officers

The Black Law Student Association held their annual officer elections this week.  Adraea Brown, who was also elected by the student body to serve on the Conduct Code Council, will be the President for this uncoming year.  Chioma Ohanyerenwa was elected for Vice-President, and Chibuzo Okafo was elected as Treasurer.  Congradulations to all of them!

The Black Law Student Association (BLSA) of Franklin Pierce Law Center is a professional, nationally-affiliated organization of black law students dedicated to improving opportunities in legal education.  For more information, visit their website at http://www.piercelaw.edu/blsa.

April 3, 2008

Judge Jack Lu to Speak on China Rule of Law program

Please join the International Intellectual Property Organization in welcoming the Honorable Judge Jack Lu of the Massachusetts Judicial Conference's China Rule of Law program.  Judge Lu will be speaking TODAY from 12:00-1:00 in room 200.  All are welcomed for this fascinating discussion on building the rule of law in China.  For more information, contact the IIPO at IIPO@piercelaw.edu.

April 6, 2008

Next Week @ Pierce Law, April 6-12

Next Week at Pierce Law

Sunday, April 6

Trustee Gloria Isla MIP '88 and Visiting Professor J. Jeffrey Hawley host a reception for Pierce Law Alumni in Mexico City ASIPI/AIPPI/IPO Meeting in Mexico City.

 

Monday, April 7

Professor Buzz Scherr is in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Mt. Mercy College, today through Wednesday. He isteaching several classes and giving a community-wide presentation, "Do You Know Where Your DNA Is? Genetics, Privacy & The Constitution."

 

Tuesday, April 8

IIPO presents "Patents of Persia: An Introduction ot the History, Culture, and Legal Structure of Iran" by Masoud Naseri. 12 noon in Room 200. Authentic Persian Cuisine will be served. RSVP to iipo@piercelaw.edu. Sponsored by the SBA and the Graduate Programs Office.

 

Wednesday, April 9

The JD and Master's class of 2008 Class Forum takes place at noon in Room 229. Food will be served. Discussion will include important graduation information.

Maine Alumni Reception at Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine. Followed by screening of Taxi to the Dark Side with Dean Hutson.

 

Thursday, April 10

Dahlia Lithwick is this year's speaker for the annual Judge Hugh H. Bownes Forum, 7 p.m. in the Rich Room. She will speak on "'Supreme Changes': How Supreme Court Press Coverage has Changed in a Few Short Years." The lecture will be followed by coffee and refreshments.

 

Friday, April 11

The Pierce Law Student Intellectual Property Law Association (SIPLA) annual Symposium begins at 1:30 in Room 229. The theme this year is "IP Owners at WIPO: Opportunities and Challenges". The Symposium will feature a panel of high-profile and well-known speakers, including WIPO officials, leading US and European attorneys and academics. It concludes with an evening reception at 5:40 p.m.

Pierce Law hosts the Concord Family YMCA's 4th Annual Spring Social on Thursday, April 10, beginning at 5:30 PM. The event benefits the Kids Campaign Fund. The evening will include a microbrew and wine tasting, yummy appetizers, and live and silent auctions.

Saturday, April 12

Admissions holds an open house for students admitted to the class of 2011.

Party like it's 1961, when Yuri Gagarin became the first human to enter space: Yuri's Night is like the St Patrick's Day or Cinco de Mayo for space.

Happy Birthday Scott Turow and Amy Ray!

 

Got news for the next Next Week @ Pierce Law? Send your events and notices to pbyfield@piercelaw.edu no later than 12 noon on the previous Wednesday. NW@PL is produced by the Pierce Law Communications Office and distributed to faculty, staff, and students towards the end of each week. 

April 7, 2008

Slate's Dahlia Lithwick on Yoo, affirmative action, the 2nd Amendment

Dahlia Lithwick will be on campus Thursday to give the annual Judge Hugh H. Bownes Forum on Civil Rights lecture -- inclement weather earlier this winter (imagine that!) delayed the address until this week -- and we thought you'd enjoy reading a selection of some of her recent columns. A taste of what you might hear Thursday:

Dahlia Lithwick is senior editor and legal correspondent for Slate magazine, where she writes a column entitled “Supreme Court Dispatches.” Her work has appeared in The New York Times, The New Republic, Elle, the Ottawa Citizen, and the Washington Post. In 2001, she received the Online News Association’s award for online commentary. Before joining Slate, Lithwick worked for a family law firm in Reno, NV and clerked for Chief Judge Procter Hug of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. She holds a BA degree in English from Yale University and JD degree from Stanford Law School.

Career Services Preparing 1Ls for Fall Recruiting

ATTENTION 1Ls: 

 Get a head start on the fall recruiting season by attending an information session by the fine folks at Career Services. Many deadlines are in mid-July, so start planning now!  Learn about job fairs, on-campus interviews, writing samples, references, transcripts, and researching employers.  Of course, what would a Pierce Law info session be without some yummy food to munch on. 

The presentation will begin promptly at 12:00 THIS TUESDAY, April 8, in the Rich Room.  If you have any questions, please contact Career Services at CareerServices@piercelaw.edu

Students Elect SBA Leaders

The Pierce Law student community elected new leadership into the Student Bar Association.  In a very close race, Shauna-Kay Hall was elected as the incoming SBA president.  The other results from the election are as follows:

SBA Vice-President-elect: Lauren Otto, 2L

SBA Treasurer-elect: Tyler Obenauf, 2L

SBA Secretary-elect: Christina Ferrari, 1L

Todd Pratt and Robert Tarcu are the 3L Governors-elect. Chibuzo Okafo was elected as a 2L Governor. The other 2L Governor will be determined in a run-off election between Chioma Ohanyerenwa and Saurabh Vishnubhakat.

Congratulations to all who ran and to all who will serve on the SBA next year.  The SBA plays an important role at Pierce Law.  In addition to allocating student fees and sponsoring events, the SBA advocates on the students' behalf to the faculty and administration.  While these officers will serve as the leadership for the SBA, all students are encouraged to participate! For more information, contact the SBA Board of Governors at SBA@piercelaw.edu.  

 

April 8, 2008

Hispanic National Bar Association ultimate meeting of the year

The Hispanic National Bar Association (HNBA) will be holding its end of the year meeting this Friday, April 11, 2008 at 5 p.m. in Room 102.  

We will be discussing the end of the year party, organized jointly with BLSA, and opening the floor for any and all issues related to the organization and our continued role in the Pierce Law Community in the following school year.  

Also we will be bidding a fond farewell to our current President Daniel Lustig and 3L members, who will be graduating this Spring.

This meeting is open to all members of the Pierce Law Community.  

Refreshments and a light snack will be served, so we kindly ask that you RSVP your attendance to hlsa@piercelaw.edu no later than Wednesday, April 9, 2008.

This is an SBA sponsored event.

April 10, 2008

You're invited to Hillel's Passover Seder

Hillel will be holding its annual Passover Seder on Sunday, April 20th at 6:00pm in the Board room. Everyone is encouraged to attend the Seder, regardless of faith.  Friends & family members are welcome. 

The Seder celebrates the Jewish holiday of Passover and its story is told over a feast.  Traditional items served are Roast turkey, beef brisket, Matzo and kugel, charoses (a combination of apples, nuts, cinnamon, honey), matzo ball soup, macaroons, and many other items.  

Tickets are $5, which includes a full catered meal and wine. Children can attend for free. Tickets will be on sale Wed. (4/16), Thurs. (4/17), and Fri. (4/18) in the Jury Box  between 12:00pm and 1:00pm.  If you are unable to purchase tickets next week but would like to attend, don't worry - tickets will be sold at the door on Sunday night.  *We just ask that you try to email us ahead of time so we can plan for seating & food.

Feel free to e-mail any questions to hillel@piercelaw.edu

We look forward to your attendance and sharing this holiday with you.

Sincerely,

Pierce Law Hillel

2nd Annual Pierce Law Student Symposium

The Second Annual Pierce Law Student Symposium will be held on Thursday, April 17, 2008, starting at 4:45 pm in the Rich Room at Pierce Law.

The student finalists and paper topics are as follows:

Jonathan Raymond: Is Kelo a Pandora's Box for Patent Law? The Supreme Court's New Take on "Takings"

Austin Padgett: The Rhetoric of Predictability: Reclaiming the Lay Ear in Music Copyright Infringement Litigation

Krum Chuchev: Are the Mini Mental State Examination forms under enforceable copyright protection, and if so, what are the physician's options?

The papers and presentations will be judged by an esteemed panel of New Hampshire attorneys and judges.  We are thrilled to have the following judges on our panel:

Judge Paul Barbadoro, United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire
Judge Carol Ann Conboy, New Hampshire Superior Court
Justice James Duggan, New Hampshire Supreme Court
Mark Sisti, Sisti Law Offices
Dan Will, Devine, Millimet & Branch, P.A.

Students and faculty are encouraged to attend the finalists' presentations, and to join our distinguished panel of judges in a dialogue with the finalists following each presentation. A wine, cheese and sandwich reception will be held after the competition.

Next Week @ Pierce Law, April 13-19

Next Week at Pierce Law

Dahlia LithwickDon't forget...

Tonight, Slate magazine's Dahlia Lithwick gives the annual Bownes Forum address. 7 p.m. in the Rich Room.

Also tonight, a Beer and Wine Tasting fundraiser for the Concord Family YMCA starts at 5:30 p.m. in the Jury Box. Tickets available from Assistant Dean Fran Canning.

Tomorrow, lunch with Peruvian attorney Jose Barreda, hosted by the International Intellectual Property Organization, 12 noon in Room 205. RSVP to iipo@piercelaw.edu.

Tomorrow, the annual SIPLA Symposium, starting at 1:30 in Room 229.

 

Sunday, April 13

Just two weeks of classes left! Why not celebrate with a bit of skiing? Thanks to the extended ski season, The 17th Annual Intragalactic Cardboard Sled Race at Mount Sunapee has been rescheduled to today. It is also Cares & Shares Day. Bring five non-perishable food items to the ticket window and ski or ride all day for only $25.

 

Monday, April 14

It's National Library Week! Join the Pierce Law Library for prizes, candy, and fun! This year, the library is launching its popular film collection of classic legal films on DVD. The first 30 film borrowers will receive a free bag of microwave popcorn! The Library also joins Lexis and Westlaw to offer several trainings this week (see below).

 

Tuesday, April 15

The Moot Court Board invites all first- and second-year students interested in applying to participate in Moot Court next year to an informative meeting at 12:10 p.m. in room 229. The Board will be there to discuss the try out process, what competitions are available, what being on moot court entails, as well as to answer any questions students might have. Whether you know you want to try out or you are considering trying out, we invite you to come learn all about Moot Court.

Death Penalty Forum hosted by the Pierce Law Review and the Social Justice Institute. This panel discussion will coincide with Pierce Law Review’s publication of a special death penalty issue, with articles written by experts in the field, law professors, and Pierce Law students. 

 

Wednesday, April 16

Library Week Training. "Westlaw: Myth v. Reality" with Mark Frongillo, Esq, Academic Account Manager. Pizza Lunch in Room 205, 12 noon - 1 p.m.     

Tickets ($5) on sale for Pierce Law Hillel's Passover Seder at lunchtime (12-1) in the Jury Box.

 

Thursday, April 17

Second Annual Pierce Law Student Symposium. 4:45 p.m. in the Rich Room.

Schweitzer Fellowship Talk: Brad Kuster, an environmental attorney who recently won an important appeals case against the EPA will be speaking about his success and how environmental law will crop up in nearly every field of law you go into. 12 noon in Room 200.

Tickets ($5) on sale for Pierce Law Hillel's Passover Seder at lunchtime (12-1) in the Jury Box.

 

Friday, April 18

Champagne Toast & Reception for the Class of 2008 with Faculty and Staff at the Capitol Center for the Arts. 5-7:30 p.m. 

Library Week Training. Library Online Training Center with Steve Albro, Lexis Training Consultant

11:30 a.m.: Drafting Pleadings, Motions and Orders
12:00 noon: Prepare to Practice: Cost Effectiveness and Time Efficient Research
1:00 p.m.: Prepare to Practice: Patent Searching on Lexis

Tickets ($5) on sale for Pierce Law Hillel's Passover Seder at lunchtime (12-1) in the Jury Box.

 

Saturday, April 19

National Hanging Out Day. Alexander Lee, a Concord lawyer, founded this annual event as part of Project Laundry List to encourage saving energy through hanging laundry instead of using the clothes dryer.

 

Looking ahead

Hillel will be holding its annual Passover Seder on Sunday, April 20th at 6:00pm in the Board room. Everyone is encouraged to attend the Seder, regardless of faith.  Friends & family members are welcome.  Tickets are $5, which includes a full catered meal and wine. Children can attend for free.

Also in the news

Adjunct professor Jim Silva has been named presient of the newly-established Northern Middlesex Economic District, a nonprofit corporation that will investigate and promote economic development and affordable housing in the city of Lowell, Massachusets and 8 of its surrounding suburbs.


Got news for the next Next Week @ Pierce Law? Send your events and notices to pbyfield@piercelaw.edu no later than 12 noon on the previous Wednesday. NW@PL is produced by the Pierce Law Communications Office and distributed to faculty, staff, and students towards the end of each week. 

April 14, 2008

Helping artists protect their work

On Tuesday, April 15th, Professor Ashlyn Lembree wil be giving a workshop for visual artists on how they can safeguard their work. Participants will learn about intellectual property protection and how it can affect an artist's work and business.

The workshop is sponsored by the New Hampshire State Council on the Arts and Microcredit NH.

April 15, 2008

Get Involved With Moot Court!!!!

Any 1L or 2L interested in learning about Moot Court opportunities for next year should attend an information session on Tuesday, April 15, 2008 in Room 229 at 12:10 pm. During the session, the Moot Court Board will be there to discuss the try out process, what competitions are available, what being on moot court entails, as well as to answer any questions students might have. Whether you know you want to try out or you are considering trying out, we invite you to come learn all about Moot Court.

Don't miss out on this great opportunity!  For more information, contact the Kristen Scaduto at KScaduto@piercelaw.edu.

Social Justice Institute Meeting TODAY

Any student wishing to learn about pro bono and community service opportunities for 2008-09 should attend an information session Tuesday April 15 at noon in Room 202.  For more information, send an email to socialjustice@piercelaw.edu.

Softball

Springtime is here, so its time to get out and play softball!  Players of all abilities are invited... nay STRONGLY ENCOURAGED.... to come out for a fun afternoon of what Chibuzo Okafo calls "the best sport EVER!"

Please meet on Tuesday April 15 at 3:30 at the Liberty Street fields.  If you are walking the fields are directly behind the white Park diamond (up the hill and behind the woods).  It is well within walking distance.  If you are driving the best way to get to the Liberty street fields is to drive down White Street, take a left on Beacon Street, take a right on Charles Street, Left on Franklin Street, and a right on Liberty street.  The fields are on the right.  Although there are many turns the fields are very close.

For more information, contact Alex Vu at AVu@piercelaw.edu.

Renovations at White Park

bilde.jpg

WHITE PARK, PIERCE LAW'S NEIGHBOR AND AN HISTORIC LANDMARK, GETTING A MUCH-NEEDED FACELIFT

The following is a portion of Shira Schoenberg's article in the Concord Monitor on April 12, 2008

"...A $1.2 million renovation plan, set to begin this summer, would install a new drainage system. It would also renovate and move the parking lot, and open up the hockey rink for year-round use.

"It will dramatically change White Park, and the public will be quite satisfied," predicted City Engineer Ed Roberge.

The project is part of a White Park master plan, completed in 2005. The master plan recommended reconstructing the parking lot, improving the fields, court and play areas, building a new skate house and improving pond access. The first phase of the project, and the only one funded so far, will focus on the parking lot and baseball diamond.

Last year, the City Council set aside $511,500 for the project, just under one-third of that coming from recreational impact fees. The city also received a $148,500 federal grant from the Department of Housing and Urban Development. Next month, the city council will decide whether to set aside the additional $477,800 needed to fully fund the first phase of improvements.

The project was designed by McFarland Johnson of Concord, and the city plans to begin advertising for bids by the end of the month. If funding is approved, a contract could be finalized by late May, with construction beginning in early June and continuing for about six months, Roberge said.

Gill said visitors may see roving closures and disturbances this summer, depending on the construction schedule, but he hopes to keep the playground, pool, basketball courts and as much of the park as possible open. "We're asking residents to be flexible," he said.

White Park was given to the city in 1884 by Armenia White in memory of her husband Nathaniel, who was a philanthropist and founder of the American Express Co. In 1982, it was put on the National Register of Historic Places. City officials have referred to it as Concord's "Boston Common," and as the "crown jewel" of the park community.

Matt Walsh, city assistant for special projects, said the investment is necessary "to maintain it at a level it deserves to be maintained, and make it more user friendly."

The often-waterlogged field is used by an adult baseball league, a youth soccer league, the high school and other local groups. Roberge said the changes will be mostly in drainage, although there will also be a new backstop and dugouts. Erik Newman, a member of the board of Friends of White Park, which has advocated for the improvements, said the plan calls for elevating the infield so the water flows toward the northeast corner of the park, and installing drainage facilities in that corner.

The parking lot would be changed even more noticeably. Currently, the lot extends lengthwise through the park, cutting it in two. It is made of dirt, gravel, and pavement studded with potholes and puddles. No lines mark the parking spots, and there are no designated spaces for handicapped parking. There is only one entrance.

"The parking lot's always been horrendous," said Jen Towle, 31, a stay-at-home mom who was feeding her baby recently at a picnic table in the park. She pointed to the potholes, and said the dirt parts of the lot are often muddy in the spring and icy in the winter. "It could use some revamping," she said.

The new plan would turn the lot 90 degrees and move it closer to White Street, so pedestrians could walk across the park without crossing the parking lot. There would be both an entrance and an exit. There would be room for 92 cars, about the same as the current lot, but spots will be clearly delineated and there would be designated handicapped spots. The lot will be paved and landscaped, with walking paths leading pedestrians from the parking lot to the hockey rink, playground, pool and ballfields. Roberge hopes it will have the city's first pervious pavement surface, an environmentally friendly type in which storm water permeates the pavement and goes back into the ground."

See this article in its entirety >>

Death Penalty Forum

The Pierce Law Review and the Social Justice Institute will be co-hosting a forum on the death penatly on Tuesday April 15 at 7:00pm in the Rich Room.  The panelists will include Pierce Law Professor Chris Johnson, as well as attorneys Peter Beeson, Renny Cushing, Barbara Keshen, Jon Kissinger, Alan Rogers, and Andru Volinsky.  The forum will be moderated by Ralph Jiminez of the Concord Monitor.

April 16, 2008

Professor Tom Field on Tafas v. Dudas

Professor Tom Field's latest column is the current cover story on IP Frontline, the online magazine of intellectual property and technology.

Read his column, Tafas v. Dudas: Elephants in Mouseholes >>

April 17, 2008

Passover Seder THIS Sunday

Pierce Law Hillel will be holding a Passover Seder on Sunday, April 20th at 6:00pm in the Board Room.  Everyone is encouraged to attend the Seder, regardless of faith.  Friends & family members are welcome.  Tickets are $5, which includes a full catered meal and wine or grape juice. Children can attend for free.

   The Seder celebrates the Jewish holiday of Passover and its story is told over a feast.  Traditional items served are Roast turkey, beef brisket, Matzo and kugel, charoses (a combination of apples, nuts, cinnamon, honey), matzo ball soup, macaroons, and many other items.  Food will be supplied by Catering from Levine's Kosher Market of Peabody, MA.

   Tickets are $5 per adult and will be on sale tom. (Wed.- 4/16), Thurs. (4/17), and Fri. (4/18) in the Jury Box  between 12:00pm and 1:00pm.  If you are unable to purchase tickets this week but would like to attend, tickets will be sold at the door on Sunday night.  Also, please email Hillel at Hillel@piercelaw.edu so that they can assure enough seating & food.

Please come celebrate Passover and enjoy a great Seder!

Hot Dog Roast and Car Demolition Fundraiser This Friday

This Friday, the Pierce Law Bookstore will host the annual Hot Dog Roast on Friday April 18.  Come enjoy some delicious food and bask in the sunshine starting at 2:00 in the courtyard behind the Jury Box.

ALSO, the 3L/MIP class will be hosting a Car Demolition fundraiser at the Hot Dog Roast.  This a great opportunity to take out some pre-finals aggression and smash a car with a sledgehammer or baseball bat! What could be more fun on beautiful Friday afternoon (and yes the forecast by the Weather Channel is 72 degrees on Friday!!!!).

You must purchase tickets for the Car Demolition Fundraiser at noon in the Jury Box.  See Erik Moskowitz for more information.

April 18, 2008

Next Week @ Pierce Law, April 20-26

Next Week at Pierce Law

News

What are you doing this summer? Why not go to China or Ireland? Space is still available in Pierce Law's popular summer programs, including the Intellectual Property Summer Institute right here in Concord. Register today!

Debbie Beauregard and Alyson Fava of the Pierce Law Graduate Programs Office have moved from 10 White Street to the third floor of the main building.

 

Sunday, April 20

Hillel holds its annual Passover Seder, 6 p.m. in the board room.

 

Monday, April 21

Dean Hutson is in Ireland this week, lecturing at the Centre for Criminal Justice & Human Rights at the University College Cork in Cork, Ireland

 

Tuesday, April 22

Happy Earth Day! Groundwork Concord is sponsoring a cleanup event at the Kiwanis Riverfront Park/Everett Arena on Earth Day, from 9:30 AM to 2:30 PM. One of the core themes of Earth Day this year is the increase in invasive plants from global warming. Teams will help eradicate invasive vines and brambles from riverfront trees and slopes. For more information, call Groundwork Concord at 224-3710.

Exit Counseling for Graduating Students. All students who have received Federal Stafford and Perkins Loans while attending Pierce Law must complete Exit Counseling before they graduate.  You can do this either in person at this meeting or online at www.mapping-your-future.org. This last in-house session will last one hour. Lunch will be served. 12 noon in Room 200.

In preparation for summer construction, the Bookstore movies to the faculty lounge, Room 218, today. THey reopen for business on Wednesday in their new location. 

 

Wednesday, April 23

Today is World Book and Copyright Day, a.k.a. the International Day of the Book.

Not to leave out other media: on this day in 1867, William Lincoln patented the zoetrope, a machine which shows animated pictures by mounting a strip of drawings in a wheel, and 20 years ago today, Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon ended its record 14-year run on the Billboard 200 chart. 

 

Thursday, April 24 

Judy Gire is attending the New England Law Library Consortium Directors' meeting in Freeport, Maine where Roberta Woods will make a presentation on a NELLCO grant project she is chairing.

Professor Emeritus Dick Hesse presents "A Conversation with John Marshall" at the Madison Library in Madison, New Hampshire at 7:00 p.m. 

 

Friday, April 25

Last day of classes! The Reading and Exam period begins. 

The 10th Annual Patent Cooperation Treaty Seminar is held today and tomorrow at the Grappone Conference Center, Concord. 

Judy Gire, Cindy Landau, Barry Shanks, Jon Cavicchi, Kathy Fletcher and Matt Jenks will attend the Law Librarians of New England (LLNE) Spring meeting in Freeport, Maine hosted by the University of Maine Law School Library. Kathy Fletcher currently serves as President of LLNE.

 

Saturday, April 26

Today is World Intellectual Property Day.

 

 

Got news for the next Next Week @ Pierce Law? Send your events and notices to pbyfield@piercelaw.edu no later than 12 noon on the previous Wednesday. NW@PL is produced by the Pierce Law Communications Office and distributed to faculty, staff, and students towards the end of each week. 

April 24, 2008

Student Organization Budget Meeting TONIGHT

The Student Bar Assocation will be running a information session for student groups about receiving funding for the 2008-2009 school year.  A representative from group each group is required to attend the meeting in order to be eligible for funding.  The meeting will take place on Thursday April 24 at 5pm in the Rich Room.  If you have any questions, please contact the SBA Treasurer, Tyler Obenauf, sba-treasurer@piercelaw.edu.

Groups Elect New Leaders for 2008-09

Several student organiztaions held officer elections for next year.  These organizations are incredibly important to the Pierce Law community.  Congratulations to the new leadership and good luck next year!

 

Taiwanese Student Association

President: Chi-Yuan Calvin Chen
Treasurer: Chi-Jung Huang

 

Women's Law Student Association

Co-Chairs:  Heather Flanner and Emila Smallidge

 

Entertainment Law Society

President: Ed Raymond
Vice President: Mitch Bragg
Treasurer: Alan Slone
Secretary: Katherine Lewis

 

And last but certainly not least.... 

Student Intellectual Property Association

3L CHAIR: MIKE BOHN
3L REPRESENTATIVE: ANDREW BUNIN
2L CHAIR: JANA MEIER
2L REPRESENTATIVE: JACK WESSEL
TREASURER: JARED STRINGHAM
SECRETARY: DAVE CROSLAND
COMMUNICATIONS CHAIR: JOHN HEIDENREICH

 

Thank you to everyone who voted! 

BLA/HSBA Co-Hosting End of the Year Bash THIS Friday

The Black Law Student Assocation and the Hispanic National Bar Association will be co-hosting an end of the year party on Friday April 25 at 6:30 in the Jury Box.  Food and refreshments will be served. This is a great way to end the school year and gear up for finals!

Austin Padgett Wins Second Annual Pierce Law Student Symposium

Austin Padgett's  The Rhetoric of Predictability: Reclaiming the Lay Ear in Music Copyright Infringement Litigation won the Second Annual Pierce Law Student Symposium, held April 17.  The grand prize was $350 and the opportunity to publish in Pierce Law Review. The other finalists were Krum Chuchev's Are the Mini Mental State Examination Forms Under Enforceable Copyright Protection, and if so, What are the Physician's Options and Jonathan Raymond's Is Kelo a Pandora's Box for Patent Law? The Supreme Court's New Take on "Takings". The contest was established to encourage students other than those on Law Review to write publishable work.

Papers were judged by:
Judge Paul Barbadoro, United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire
Judge Carol Ann Conboy, New Hampshire Superior Court
Justice James Duggan, New Hampshire Supreme Court
Mark Sisti, Sisti Law Offices
Dan Will, Devine, Millimet & Branch, P.A.

Padgett's paper focused on the question of whether juries can be trusted as triers of fact in cases relating to music copyrights, due to the sophistication of the subject matter and alleged lack thereof among jury members. Lay juries make less predictable decisions about the similarity of musical works than professionals would. Similarity is based on the composition, not recordings of a song. And as with all copyright-protected material, it is the expressions of ideas, not the ideas themselves, which are protected. Two basic kinds of reform proposals have been put forward. One is for procedural change: who determines the similarity of compositions? Substantive change would be less radical because a jury would still be the trier of fact, but what constitutes "similarity" would change.

Next Week @ Pierce Law, April 27-May 3

Next Week at Pierce Law

Don't forget...

Celebrate the end of classes Friday night at The Annual End of the Year Party, organized jointly by the Black Law Student Association and Hispanic National Bar Association. Food and refreshments will be served. In the Jury Box at 6:30 p.m. Come take a study break!

 

Sunday, April 27

Study!

 

Monday, April 28

Exams!

 

Tuesday, April 29

Professor Buzz Scherr gives a presentation in Kellogg Auditorium at Dartmouth to the Dartmouth Community Medical School on forensic DNA and constitutional privacy.

 

Wednesday, April 30

Tom Bunnell, Director of Pierce Law's Institute for Health, Law and Ethics, presents on the "State Children's Health Insurance Program: Public Policy Options and Opportunities" at a conference of the New England Alliance for Children's Health in Lowell, Massachusetts.

 

Thursday, May 1

Faculty Meeting, in the Board Room at 1 p.m. 

Buzz Scherr will give a presentation to New Hampshire Superior, District and Probate Court judges on "Ethical Issues in a Less-Than-Perfect World: Managing Witnesses in Sexual Assault Cases."

It's Law Day

 

Friday, May 2

Sophie Sparrow will be presenting at the New Hampshire Judicial College, Meredith, NH.  She will conduct a writing workshop, Effective Opinion Writing in New Hampshire Courts, for judges from district, family and superior courts.

 

Saturday, May 3

Today is World Press Freedom Day, a day designated by the United Nations to raise awareness of the importance of freedom of the press and to remind governments of their duty to respect and uphold the right to freedom of expression enshrined under Article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.

 

Looking ahead...

Alleviate some of the finals-related stress at Pierce Law Hillel's annual Bagel Brunch, Sunday May 4 in the Jury Box.  Bagels, lox, cream cheese and juice will be served. The entire Pierce Law community is welcome, and there's no cover! The Hillel Bagel Brunch is a Student Bar Association-sponsored event.

 

 

Got news for the next Next Week @ Pierce Law? Send your events and notices to pbyfield@piercelaw.edu no later than 12 noon on the previous Wednesday. NW@PL is produced by the Pierce Law Communications Office and distributed to faculty, staff, and students towards the end of each week. 

April 29, 2008

Beat the Finals Blues with Bagels and Loaded Baked Potatoes THIS Tuesday

Student Services is providing free bagels from Bagel Works in the Jury Box Atrium on Tuesday April 29 starting at 11am.  Get 'em while they're hot.

 

Then, The Student Spouses and Significant Others Assocation is sponsoring a Baked Potato dinner (with Chili, sour cream, green onions, butter, chopped olives, nacho cheese sauce, salsa) from 4:30-6:30 in the Jury Box.  The cost is $3 and includes a beverage.

About April 2008

This page contains all entries posted to Pierce Law Reporter in April 2008. They are listed from oldest to newest.

March 2008 is the previous archive.

May 2008 is the next archive.

Many more can be found on the main index page or by looking through the archives.