For John Marshall Law School, this may be the beginning of the end.
On Monday, Dean Robert J. D’Agostino tore open a long-awaited letter from the American Bar Association’s Accreditation Committee. The news wasn’t good.
Dean Robert J. D'Agostino and John Marshall Law students received a blow Monday when a letter arrived from the ABA's Accreditation Committee. It recommended against granting the Georgia school's request for provisional accreditation, a necessary step to full accredidation. D'Agostino says the report is erroneous and that he'll appeal. Meanwhile some students face being barred from taking the Georgia bar exam.
May 04, 1999 at 12:00 AM
1 minute read
The original version of this story was published on Law.Com
For John Marshall Law School, this may be the beginning of the end.
On Monday, Dean Robert J. D’Agostino tore open a long-awaited letter from the American Bar Association’s Accreditation Committee. The news wasn’t good.
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