Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Above the Law: Morning Docket: 02.19.13

Above the Law
A Legal Web Site – News, Commentary, and Opinions on Law Firms, Lawyers, Law School, Law Suits, Judges and Courts
Morning Docket: 02.19.13
Feb 19th 2013, 14:05

A future law student?

* Save for an unintelligible joke made last month, it's been seven years since Clarence Thomas has spoken during oral arguments, much less asked a question, but with no offense to his colleagues, he'd rather "allow the advocates to advocate." [Washington Post]

* Sorry, members of the American public, but something like 95 percent of you are too stupid to understand what's going on during Supreme Court hearings, so there's no point in having cameras in the courtroom to film them. (Sotomayor, J.) [New York Times]

* "Having an empty bench means people don't get their cases heard," but it seems like Senate Republicans could not care less. Obama's facelift for the federal judiciary is going to have to wait a little while longer. [San Francisco Chronicle]

* A lawgasm for prestige nerds: the Harvard Law Review received federal trademark protection, and with that, the number three law school in the country gained some bragging rights over Yale. [Daily Report (reg. req.)]

* Oh my God, you guys, law school applications are down, no one can find jobs, and recent graduates are in debt up to their eyeballs. This is totally new information that no one's heard before. [Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]

* Turning to your parents for law school advice is perhaps the worst idea in the world — after all, they're the cause of your "special little snowflake" syndrome in the first place. [Law Admissions Lowdown / U.S. News]

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Tags: Admissions, Cameras in the courtroom, Clarence Thomas, Confirmation Hearings, Confirmations, Federal Government, Federal Judges, Harvard Law Review, Harvard Law School, Job Searches, Judicial Confirmations, Law School Admissions, Law Schools, Morning Docket, Politics, Republicans, SCOTUS, Sonia Sotomayor, Student Loans, Supreme Court, Trademark Law, Trademarks, U.S. Senate

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