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UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA LEVIN COLLEGE OF LAW August 25, 2008 | Vol. XII, Issue 1

In This Issue

Chief Justice John Roberts to Judge UF Law Moot Court Competition
Dean's Message: Welcome from Dean Jerry
Martin H. Levin Advocacy Center Breaks Ground
Career Spotlight: Derek Bruce
Scribbled Note Leads Human Rights Extern to Discover Costa Rican Legal Hurdles
UF Law Student Wins Diversity Scholarship
UF Law Welcomes New and Visiting Faculty
Lidsky Quoted in Time on New Attorney Web Site

News Briefs

Student Affairs Welcomes New Registrar Sharon Booker
Study Abroad Program Raises Awareness to Benefit South African School
Inn of Court Seeks Members
LIC Announcements
ELULP Informational Meeting
CSRRR Research Assistant Needed
Funds Available to Student Organizations

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Katie Blasewitz
Communications Coordinator
Editor, FlaLaw Online

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Director

Lindy Brounley
Associate Director, UF Law Magazine Editor

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Online Communications Coordinator

Scott Emerson
Senior Writer

Ian Fisher
Law Student Writer

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Photographer

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Chief Justice John Roberts to Judge UF Law Moot Court Competition Sept. 5

by Ian Fisher
Law Student Writer/ 2L

Chief Justice RobertsJohn G. Roberts, Jr., Chief Justice of the United States, will have a chance to put four UF law students on the spot this semester.

Roberts will become the first representative of the U.S. Supreme Court in history to judge the Justice Campbell Thornal Moot Court Final Four on Sept. 5 at the Curtis M. Phillips Center.

"To have the Chief Justice of our nation judge our Final Four Moot Court Competition is a great privilege for our students and the University of Florida," said Robert Jerry, dean of the UF College of Law and Levin, Mabie and Levin Professor of Law. "It is a tremendous understatement to say that it has elevated both the significance of this annual event and the anxiety levels of our student competitors."

In years past, Florida Supreme Court justices or judges from the 11th Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals have presided over the competition. Judge Peter T. Fay, Judge Susan H. Black and Judge Rosemary Barkett will join Roberts on the Moot Court panel. They are all UF College of Law graduates and are judges from the 11th Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals.

"We’re usually lucky to get one judge from the 11th Circuit," said third-year law student Charles Roberson, president of the Moot Court Executive Board. "This time we’ve got the Chief Justice and we’ve got three judges from the 11th Circuit, so it’s definitely the most prestigious bench we’ve ever had."

Roberts became Chief Justice of the United States on Sept. 29, 2005, after being nominated by President George W. Bush. Immediately prior to that, Roberts served as a judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Roberts has also argued in front of the Supreme Court many times as a private attorney and as government counsel.

Tickets, Policies & Procedures

  1. The Moot Court Final Four will be open to all law students. It will be at the Curtis M. Phillips Center on Sept. 5 at 10 a.m.
  2. One ticket per person will be available for all faculty staff, and currently enrolled law students.
  3. Tickets may be picked up in the Office of Student Affairs from Monday, Aug. 25 at 9 a.m. until Thursday, Aug. 28 at 5 pm, when they will be released to alumni. Students must bring a valid law school UFID and may not pick up tickets for other students.
  4. Students must show law school UFIDs to get in and may not bring guest.
  5. Students are asked to return any tickets that will go unused.
  6. Students may not bring bookbags, any other large bags, or laptops. Photography is prohibited and cellphones must be turned off or in silent mode.
  7. Friday morning classes will be cancelled. They will resume at 1 p.m.
  8. Doors will open at 8:30 a.m. Late students will be seated during breaks in the balcony.

UF’s Moot Court competition gives students a hypothetical case and the students write an appellate brief, which is worth about 40 percent of the final score. After the brief is submitted the students prepare and argue two 10-minute oral arguments, which are worth about 30 percent each. The students first argue against the position of their brief, then later in support of the position they took in their brief.

The Justice Campbell Thornal Moot Court team was founded in 1961 and was named after the Florida Supreme Court Chief Justice. The team competes in numerous intercollegiate competitions across the country. Its mission is to promote excellence in appellate advocacy.

"It’s kind of a once-in-a-lifetime experience for the people that are selected for the final four," Roberson said. "It’s very prestigious, and not very many people can say that they’ve argued in front of the Chief Justice."

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