[LAW-LIB:54074] Re: Texas Lawyer and Nat'l L.J.

From: Ailsa Scott (ailsa.scott1@btinternet.com)
Date: Wed Nov 14 2007 - 11:48:37 PST


Dear All,

Many thanks to those who responded, I am very grateful. Thank you for the help with the citations. Was the Texas Lawyer once known as the Texas Lawman? [cue visual of gunslinging-western-type-hero - sorry]

Regarding the elusive Miriam Rozen article, I (ahem) am embarrassed to admit that I could have Googled the title in quotation marks and would have found the online version which some of you very kindly sent me. Your time is appreciated. [In this particular instance, Google wins over Factiva. So I daren't confess to peeking at Wikipedia the other day...]

As someone pointed out, this article appeared in the Texas Lawyer, not the National Law Journal as written in the list (apologies to whoever put the list together for saying this - I am actually deeply grateful.)

Thank you all again,

Ailsa

MLIS Research: Disaster Management in Law Libraries
City University
London U.K.
  ----- Original Message -----
  From: Ailsa Scott
  To: law-lib@ucdavis.edu
  Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2007 4:05 PM
  Subject: [LAW-LIB:54064] Re: Texas Lawyer and Nat'l L.J.

  Dear Colleagues,

  Many thanks to those who have replied. I appreciate your time. Thanks for alerting me to the existence of Bieber's.

  I have just now found the Texas Lawyer on the Factiva list of sources. I have also found the National Law Journal there, but it doesn't retrieve Miriam Rozen's article -any thoughts on this?

  kind regards,
  Ailsa
    ----- Original Message -----
    From: Ailsa Scott
    To: law-lib@ucdavis.edu
    Sent: Wednesday, November 14, 2007 3:28 PM
    Subject: Texas Lawyer and Nat'l L.J.

    Dear Colleagues,

    I am trying to source some of the journal articles listed in "And Still I Rise" - the biblography very kindly provided on the AALL website:

    http://www.aallnet.org/caucus/bllc/And%20Still%20I%20Rise%20Bibliography.pdf

    Unfortunately I haven't had any success via my access to a range of databases.

    Am I right in thinking that Tex. Law. is Texas Lawyer rather than Texas Law Review? And is Nat'l L.J. National Law Journal? Help with these abbreviations would be happily received.

    I am wondering if anyone is able to help? If so, please contact me off-list. I would be most grateful for any assistance.

    Kind regards,
    Ailsa
    MLIS Research: Disaster Management in Law Libraries
    City University
    London U.K.



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