This Week: The Miscellaneous-Post Edition. The focus this week is on particularly good or interesting posts by law students regardless of topic. All others themes are out the window, leaving us with these twelve posts that caught my eye--
Ambivalent No Longer Having graduated from law school, a legendary blogger closes down one weblog and starts another. [ambivalent imbroglio and the imbroglio]
Are Blogs a Fad? No, they're merely subject to the principles of creative destruction. [Crescat Sententia]
The Single End-of-Semester Law-School Exam As a Torture Device Why a system of multiple exams over the course of a semester would make more sense. [Preaching to the Perverted]
Hatred for the Aforementioned Torture Device Expressed in a Single Photo How one student feels about studying for the Con Law exam. [Naked Drinking Coffee]
The Stupidest Exam Cheats in the History of the World Contempt for Con Law is one thing, but cheating on the exam is something else. [BuffaloWings&Vodka]
It's Good to Have Goals First goal: don't become that lady in the grocery store. [Will Work For Favorable Dicta]
First of All, Take Anything You Read on Weblogs with a Grain of Salt Things the incoming law-school class of 2009 needs to know. [3L Epiphany]
If Were Up to Me, I'd Ban the Word "Cool" Typepad allows weblog authors to ban particular words from the comments on their weblogs. [Supplemental Jurisdiction]
Getting Paid to Sit in There An open letter to an evidence proctor who couldn't get his act together. [Legally Blonde]
A Relationship That's on the Rocks An open letter to a law school. [Previously Unpublished]
May I Exhaust Your Administrative Remedies? Pick up lines from administrative-law class. [The Unreasonable Man]
A Smart Move by a Law-Student Blogger He's hosting this week's Blawg Review. [Lawyerlike]
Look for next week's roundup at Will Work for Favorable Dicta, then it's back here the week after that. You can find some other recent roundups in the "At the Law Schools 2" category, and sixty or so older roundups from the 2004-2005 era here.

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