Online Lawyer
This month "Online Lawyer" features more Internet
resources that readers shared with the Wisconsin Lawyer. If you know of
any law-related or "just-plain-fun" Internet sites for your colleagues
to visit, or you want to share a time- or cost-saving technology tip,
email Jean
Anderson, or call Anderson at (608) 250-6136.
Legislators on the Internet. Each state legislator now has a homepage
on the Internet, including a photo, address, phone number and email
address, plus links to the 1995-1996 Blue Book biography, district map
and committee assignments. The Legislature's web site currently provides
access to the Wisconsin Statutes, the text of all current session bills
and acts, bill histories and an index. Log on to the Wisconsin Legislature's
homepage and then choose the senate or assembly link.
U.S. House of Representatives Internet Law Library. Search the
fulltext of the U.S. Code and the Code of Federal Regulations. This site
also includes links to more than 5,700 law resources on the Internet
that are arranged by jurisdiction and subject.
BigEar: Current Legal Resources on the Net
Attorney Fritz Knaak of Vadnais Heights, Minn., suggests the site, BigEar,
which is part of the Legal Information Institute at Cornell University.
"I like BigEar because it regularly refreshes its list of the latest
law-related sites," he writes. "It includes law schools, law firms,
various law-related search engines and resource centers, software
(including anti-virus information and packages), shareware - you name
it."
Knaak also is a fan of WisBar, the State Bar of Wisconsin's homepage.
"WisBar clearly is the best of its kind on the Internet. I can't tell
you how much I appreciate the effort that obviously is going into
it."
University of Cincinatti. Atty. Steve Lesavich of Troutdatel, Ore.,
recommends two pages at this university site worth visiting. One page
gives you information on the 1933 Securities
Act, the other page provides information on the 1934 Securities Exchange
Act.
Wisconsin Lawyer