By Avalon Zoppo | Brad Kutner | Christine Charnosky | September 29, 2022
"I very much doubt that any liberal-leaning students had any desire to clerk for him, so his decision ironically only adversely impacts conservative-leaning Federalist Society members who agree with him ideologically," one Yale law student said.
By Christine Charnosky | September 27, 2022
"The grant will ensure that students will continue assisting local journalists to challenge government secrecy and wrongful police arrests of journalists," Susan E. Seager, adjunct law professor and head of the Press Freedom and Transparency practice at the Intellectual Property, Arts and Technology Clinic at UCI, said in a statement.
By Christine Charnosky | September 22, 2022
"LexPostBacc is a historic partnership between AccessLex and 29 law schools seeking to broaden legal education opportunity and inclusive student success," Aaron N. Taylor, executive director of AccessLex Institute, told Law.com. "These aspiring lawyers in this first cohort will be exposed to a year-long curriculum designed to prepare them to thrive as law students."
By Christine Charnosky | September 20, 2022
Wax's lawyer, David J. Shapiro, sent a 56-page memorandum to Penn Law on Aug. 31, requesting the university "postpone further proceedings until Prof. Wax's cancer treatment concludes," since she is "too ill to meet arbitrary deadlines or participate in any proceedings and will be unable to do so until at least the end of the fall semester 2022."
By Nate Robson | September 19, 2022
Richard Revesz, who clerked for Justice Thurgood Marshall, was nominated to a post in the Office of Management and Budget.
By Christine Charnosky | September 9, 2022
"Yeshiva shouldn't have been forced to go all the way to the Supreme Court to receive such a commonsense ruling in favor of its First Amendment rights," said a lawyer for the university.
By Christine Charnosky | September 6, 2022
While the ABA proposal, if adopted, would merely give law schools the choice of whether to require standardized testing as part of their admissions processes, many of the comments have focused on whether the LSAT helps or harms diversity.
By Christine Charnosky | August 31, 2022
"I'm grateful for my time as a professor and practitioner at Duke Law, where I was fortunate to work with a legion of talented students, collaborate with amazing faculty colleagues, and benefit from the insights of fantastic federal appellate judges in my appellate practice course," Sean E. Andrussier said in a statement.
By Christine Charnosky | August 22, 2022
To date, 27 comments have been posted regarding the proposed changes to Standard 503. Nineteen comments express support for removing the standardized testing requirement for admittance to law school and eight comments express opposition. However, one of those eight comments was endorsed by 51 people.
By Ellen Bardash | August 18, 2022
With the 2020 exam cancelled in response to the pandemic, more than twice as many people sat for the Delaware bar exam in 2021 as in 2019.
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