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Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 6:35 am
by sundaynightdelite
I have a case that my professor talked about regarding moulding of verdicts.

Now, he never told us that he successfully argued this Court of Appeals case, but did hint at it, by saying something like, they had an excellent lawyer. My friend actually noticed this, to his credit.

Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 7:11 am
by 270910
This is a stupid question.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 8:00 am
by ggocat
sundaynightdelite wrote: Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?
1. no.
2. no.
3. if a closed book exam, yes.
4. no.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 9:20 am
by blsingindisguise
"wow, although this student doesn't know much, he blatantly kissed my ass on the exam"

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 10:24 am
by apper123
disco_barred wrote:This is a stupid question.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 10:25 am
by vanwinkle
apper123 wrote:
disco_barred wrote:This is a stupid question.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 10:25 am
by Matthies
ggocat wrote:
sundaynightdelite wrote: Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?
1. no.
2. no.
3. if a closed book exam, yes.
4. no.
credited response

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 2:23 pm
by Renzo
blsingindisguise wrote:"wow, although this student doesn't know much, he blatantly kissed my ass on the exam"
No, TITCR

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 5:04 pm
by tome
ggocat wrote:
sundaynightdelite wrote: Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?
1. no.
2. no.
[strike]3. if a closed book exam, yes.[/strike]
4. no.
If you want to do well, you need to go into every exam treating it as closed book. But otherwise TITCR.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Tue Apr 27, 2010 5:18 pm
by ggocat
tome wrote:
ggocat wrote:
sundaynightdelite wrote: Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?
1. no.
2. no.
[strike]3. if a closed book exam, yes.[/strike]
4. no.
If you want to do well, you need to go into every exam treating it as closed book. But otherwise TITCR.
No, I don't.

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Wed Apr 28, 2010 11:10 am
by tome
ggocat wrote:
tome wrote:
ggocat wrote:
sundaynightdelite wrote: Should I find ANY reason to cite this on my final exam? I mean anything.
Should I even study it any more than other cases?
Should I memorize the holding?
Sing the appellant's attorney's praises?
1. no.
2. no.
[strike]3. if a closed book exam, yes.[/strike]
4. no.
If you want to do well, you need to go into every exam treating it as closed book. But otherwise TITCR.
No, I don't.
Any time you are reading something you are not writing = not scoring points = fail

Re: Cite case that professor argued?

Posted: Thu Apr 29, 2010 10:21 pm
by enygma
tome wrote:[
Any time you are reading something you are not writing = not scoring points = fail
maybe if you type slow in a silly accent.