1. Bernard J. Hibbitts, Last Writes? Reassessing the Law Review in the Age of Cyberspace, N.Y.U.L. Rev. 615, 668 (1996)
2. Bernard J. Hibbitts, Yesterday Once More: Skeptics, Scribes, and the Demise of Law Reviews, 30 Akron L. Rev. 267, 288 n.81 (1996).
3. Professor Hibbitts notes that some editorial tasks "could be discharged with the aid of computerized spell-checkers, grammar checkers, and even citation-checkers . . . ." Hibbitts, supra note 1, at 673.
6. For a copy of the Mr. Salinger's "proof", see 50 Greatest Conspiracies of All Time, Salinger Don't Surf (But We Think he Should) (visited Nov. 22, 1996) <http://www.conspire.com/russell.html>; see also Howard A. Denemark, The Death of Law Review Has Been Predicted: What Might be Lost When the Last Law Review Shuts Down, 27 Seton Hall L. Rev. ____ , 3 n.189 (Forthcoming 1997) (discussing Mr. Salinger's error as an illustration of the lack of trustworthiness of information on the Web).
7. See Alaska Law Review (visited Nov. 9, 1996), <http://www.law.duke.edu/journals/alr/mainpage/htm>.