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By Monika Gonzalez Mesa | May 11, 2017
University of Florida Levin College of Law alumnus Hugh Culverhouse, Jr., has pledged to donate $1.5 million for incoming student scholarships if the school's law community raises an additional $1.5 million by the first day of classes Aug. 14.
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By Karen Sloan | May 9, 2017
The funds will establish new scholarships for students interested in public interest, academic, and government careers, and create a new clinical professorship.
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By Karen Sloan | May 8, 2017
The legal academy is well represented in President Donald Trump's initial slate of federal judicial nominees, unveiled Monday.
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By Karen Sloan | May 5, 2017
The leadership of Florida A&M University on Tuesday removed Angela Felecia Epps as dean of its law school—part of a larger purge that included the deans of its journalism, pharmaceutical and education programs.
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By Michael Booth | May 4, 2017
South Texas College of Law Houston has received a $1.27 million gift aimed at launching a criminal defense certification program, which is meant to train defense lawyers to more effectively represent indigent defendants in the city's courts.
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By Karen Sloan | May 3, 2017
College juniors around the world can have a guaranteed seat, but they must get experience before they start.
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By Karen Sloan | May 3, 2017
Purdue University on April 27 announced plans to purchase Kaplan University—a national consortium of online and brick-and-mortar degree programs that includes Concord Law School.
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By Karen Sloan | May 1, 2017
The former judge's appointment is the latest in a wave of women landing law dean jobs.
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By Lizzy McLellan | May 1, 2017
Duquesne University School of Law has named its first female dean, tapping interim dean Maureen Lally-Green to fill the role.
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By Marcia Coyle | April 28, 2017
In the U.S. Supreme Court term that ended last June, Justice Samuel Alito turned to books most often to bolster his opinions, while Justice Anthony Kennedy—the court's most influential voter—made least use of the wisdom embodied in books. Justices cite books for a variety of reasons, Yale Law School's Linda Greenhouse, a veteran high court observer, writes in "The Books of the Justices" in the latest Michigan Law Review.
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